CAS Bulletin 2002 - 2004

Transcription

CAS Bulletin 2002 - 2004
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY BULLETIN
2002–2004
College of
Arts and Science
ANNOUNCEMENT FOR
THE 170TH AND 171ST SESSIONS
NEW YORK UNIVERSITY
WASHINGTON SQUARE, NEW YORK, NEW YORK 10003
New York University Bulletin (USPS-383620), Vol. CII, No. 8, April 22, 2002. Published weekly from March for 12 consecutive issues by New York University, 100 Washington Square East, New York, NY 10003-6688. Periodicals postage paid at New
York, NY, and at additional entry offices. Postmaster: Send address changes to New York Bulletin, 547 La Guardia Place, New
York, NY 10012-1464.
Notice: The policies, requirements, course offerings, schedules, activities, tuition, fees, and calendar of the school and its departments and programs set forth
in this bulletin are subject to change without notice at any time at the sole discretion of the administration. Such changes may be of any nature, including, but
not limited to, the elimination of the school or college, programs, classes, or activities; the relocation of or modification of the content of any of the foregoing;
and the cancellation of scheduled classes or other academic activities.
Payment of tuition or attendance at any classes shall constitute a student’s acceptance of the administration’s rights as set forth in the above paragraph.
TA B L E O F
Contents
An Introduction to New York University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5
The Schools and Colleges of the University . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6
New York University and New York . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7
University Administration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .9
A Brief History of the College of Arts and Science . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
College Directory . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
Calendar 2002-2004 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
Index to Majors and Minors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21
The Morse Academic Plan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
Departments and Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
Admission . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .277
Tuition, Fees, and Financial Aid . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .284
Student Activities, University Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .291
Community Service . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .303
Honors and Awards . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .304
Registration, Advisement, and Counseling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .309
Degree Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .312
Preprofessional, Accelerated, and Specialized Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .314
Arts and Science Summer Programs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .319
Programs Abroad . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .320
Academic Policies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .326
Faculty of Arts and Science . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .333
Standing Committees/Representatives . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .353
Washington Square Campus Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .354
Travel Directions to the Washington Square Campus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .356
Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .357
3
RUNNING
FEET
33
AN INTRODUCTION TO
New York University
T
he founding of New York University in 1831 by a group
of eminent private citizens was a historic event in American education. In the early 19th century, a major emphasis
in higher education was on the study of Greek and Latin, with little attention to modern or contemporary subjects. The founders of
New York University intended to enlarge the scope of higher education to meet the needs of persons aspiring to careers in business,
industry, science, and the arts, as well as in law, medicine, and the
ministry. The opening of the University of London in 1828 convinced New Yorkers that their city, too, should have a university.
The first president of New York University’s governing
council was Albert Gallatin, former adviser to Thomas Jefferson
and secretary of the treasury in Jefferson’s cabinet. Gallatin and
his cofounders said that the new university was to be a “national university” that would provide a “rational and practical education for all.”
The result of the founders’ foresight is today a university that is recognized both nationally and internationally as a
leader in scholarship. Of the more than 3,000 colleges and universities in America, only 61 private institutions are members of
the distinguished Association of American Universities. New
York University is one of the 61. Students come to the University from all 50 states and from 140 foreign countries.
The University includes 14 schools and colleges at six
major centers in Manhattan. In addition, the University operates
branch campus programs in Westchester County at Manhattanville College and in Rockland County at St. Thomas Aquinas
College. Certain of the University’s research facilities, notably
the Nelson Institute of Environmental Medicine, are located in
Sterling Forest, near Tuxedo, New York. Although overall the
University is large, the divisions are small- to moderate-sized
units—each with its own traditions, programs, and faculty.
Enrollment in the undergraduate divisions ranges
between 90 and 6,200. While some introductory classes
in some programs have large numbers of students, many classes
are small. More than 2,500 courses are offered, leading to more
than 25 different degrees.
1832
College of Arts
and Science
1835
School of Law
1841
School of Medicine
1865
College of Dentistry
1886
Graduate School of Arts
and Science
1890
The Steinhardt
School of Education
1900
Leonard N. Stern
School of Business
1934
School of Continuing
and Professional Studies
1938
Robert F. Wagner
Graduate School of
Public Service
1948
Post-Graduate
Medical School
1960
Shirley M. Ehrenkranz
School of Social Work
1965
Tisch School of the Arts
1972
Gallatin School of
Individualized Study
1963
Mount Sinai School
of Medicine
(affiliated)
INTRODUCTION
•
5
The Schools
and Colleges of
the University
The College of Arts and Science
offers the Bachelor of Arts degree in
a wide range of programs in the
humanities, science, social sciences,
and foreign languages and literatures
and, in some departments, the Bachelor of Science degree. Joint programs of study currently involve
NYU’s Robert F. Wagner Graduate
School of Public Service, Graduate
School of Arts and Science, the Steinhardt School of Education, Leonard
N. Stern School of Business, Shirley
M. Ehrenkranz School of Social
Work, School of Medicine, and College of Dentistry, as well as Stevens
Institute of Technology.
The School of Law is one of the
oldest law schools in the United
States. It offers a comprehensive first
professional program leading to the
degree of Juris Doctor and a graduate curriculum leading to the degrees
of Master of Laws, Master of Comparative Jurisprudence, and Doctor
of Juridical Science.
The School of Medicine and
Post-Graduate Medical School offer
the Doctor of Medicine and Doctor
of Philosophy degrees and courses for
accreditation designed to meet the
needs of physicians in practice. Medical students and residents gain clinical experience through the NYU
Hospitals Center, which includes the
726-bed Tisch Hospital and the 174bed Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation
Medicine, both of which are part of
the Mount Sinai-NYU Medical Center/Health System. The school also
maintains affiliations with select
institutions for a variety of joint academic and clinical programs. Most
clinical teaching takes place at the
1,232-bed Bellevue Hospital, where
the School of Medicine supervises
care. Other affiliated hospitals
include the Hospital for Joint Diseases, NYU Downtown Hospital,
and the New York Department of
Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
The Cooperative Care unit,
housed in the Arnold and Marie
Schwartz Health Care Center, offers
an innovative health care program in
which patients receive health care
and educational services in a centralized area with the assistance of a livein relative or friend.
The school’s Skirball Institute of
Biomolecular Medicine is one of the
world’s leading medical research centers, with research emphasizing the
biomolecular roots of disease. Specif6
•
INTRODUCTION
ic areas of focus include developmental genetics, molecular pathogenesis,
neurobiology, and structural biology.
The College of Dentistry is the
third oldest and the largest private
dental school in the United States. It
offers a predoctoral program leading
to the Doctor of Dental Surgery
degree, as well as advanced education
programs in the dental specialties and
allied health programs in dental
hygiene and dental assisting. The
patient care clinics, laboratories, and
other teaching facilities that comprise
the College of Dentistry are housed
within several buildings, including
the Arnold and Marie Schwartz Hall
of Dental Sciences and the K. B.
Weissman Clinical Science Building.
The center is located on First Avenue,
from East 24th Street to East 25th
Street, in the midst of one of the
nation’s most renowned health sciences complexes, which extends from
East 14th Street to East 34th Street.
The Graduate School of Arts and
Science offers the degrees of Master of
Arts, Master of Science, Master of
Fine Arts, and Doctor of Philosophy
in most areas of the humanities, social
sciences, and natural sciences. Several
certificate programs are also offered.
The NYU in Paris and NYU in
Madrid M.A. programs are based in
centers in Paris and Madrid, respectively. Dual degree programs of study
currently involve the School of Law,
the School of Medicine, the Leonard
N. Stern School of Business, and the
Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of
Public Service. Courses are offered in
the late afternoon and evening as well
as during the day.
The Steinhardt School of
Education offers a broad range of
innovative undergraduate preprofessional and professional programs and
advanced graduate study in education, health, communications, and
the arts professions. Undergraduate
programs lead to the Bachelor of Science or Bachelor of Music degrees
and combine a solid foundation in
the liberal arts with specialized
course work and fieldwork, clinical
practice, or internships in a wide
variety of settings throughout New
York City. Graduate students may
enroll in master’s, advanced certificate, and doctoral programs in a
wide variety of disciplines. Courses
are given weekdays, evenings, weekends, and summers to full-time,
part-time, and special students.
Study abroad is available for undergraduates during the academic year
and for graduate students during the
summer. Applied research opportunities abound for all students.
The Leonard N. Stern School of
Business is located in a three-building complex that comprises Tisch
and Shimkin Halls and the state-ofthe-art Henry Kaufman Management
Center, which houses the graduate
programs. The Washington Square
complex is adjacent to the University’s renowned Elmer Holmes Bobst
Library and Study Center. The Stern
School offers B.S., M.B.A., and Ph.D.
degrees. Students may specialize in
accounting or taxation, economics,
finance, information systems, international business, management, marketing, operations management,
statistics, and actuarial science. Joint
graduate-level programs are offered
with the School of Law and the Graduate School of Arts and Science.
Enrollment in the graduate program
may be full or part time.
The Undergraduate College of
the Stern School of Business administers the undergraduate business
program. This program offers a new,
innovative curriculum that integrates
liberal arts studies with business
studies. Through this course of
study, students are exposed in a distinctive manner to the international
dimensions of business, develop
strong interpersonal and team-building skills, gain a sense of professional
responsibility, and undertake crossdisciplinary course work while
retaining a strong individualized
component through elective course
work. The undergraduate curriculum
is a full-time course of study.
The School of Continuing and
Professional Studies for more than
60 years has provided courses and
credentials designed to meet the cultural and career needs of today’s adult
population. The school boasts a wide
range of noncredit classes in information technologies and digital media;
e-business; real estate and construction;
publishing; marketing and management; film and video; creative writing; international affairs; foreign languages; hospitality; finance and law;
and more. The Virtual College™,
SCPS’s distance learning component,
hosts a growing number of online
courses across a variety of disciplines.
SCPS also offers workshops for adults
considering a career change or return-
New York
University and
New York
ing to college, as well as opportunities
to study for an associate’s, bachelor’s,
or a master’s degree.
The Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service offers
curricula in public administration,
including nonprofit management,
financial management, public policy
analysis, comparative and development administration, and international administration; urban public
policy studies; urban planning; and
health policy and management. Master’s and doctoral degree programs
are offered. The Advanced Professional Certificate Programs and the
Master of Science in Management
Program offer career development
opportunities for experienced professionals, including the Advanced
Management Program for Clinicians
(AMPC). Joint degree programs are
available with the College of Arts
and Science, the School of Law, the
Steinhardt School of Education, and
the Shirley M. Ehrenkranz School of
Social Work. Courses for full-time
and part-time students are offered in
the late afternoon and evening. Special Saturday programs are available
in public and nonprofit management
and in health services management.
The Shirley M. Ehrenkranz
School of Social Work offers Bachelor
of Science, Master of Social Work,
and Doctor of Philosophy degrees.
The bachelor’s program prepares students for beginning social work practice immediately on graduation and
for admission to graduate programs
with advanced standing. The master’s program prepares students for
the core mission of social work and
provides an advanced concentration
in clinical social work. The doctoral
program offers a concentration in
clinical social work. It prepares graduates to assume leadership positions
as researchers, advanced practitioners,
and educators. The school also offers
an Advanced Certificate in Clinical
Social Work and a Post-Master’s Certificate Program in the Treatment of
Alcohol- and Drug-Abusing Clients.
The Tisch School of the Arts,
founded in 1965, provides undergraduate and graduate training in
aspects of the performing and visual
arts. Departments and programs
offering professional training are act-
ing, dance, design, drama, performance studies, film and television,
cinema studies, photography and
imaging, dramatic writing, musical
theatre, and interactive telecommunications. Degrees offered are the
B.F.A., M.F.A., M.P.S., and, through
the Graduate School of Arts and Science, the M.A. and Ph.D.
The Gallatin School of Individualized Study was organized to promote innovative degree programs. It
combines flexible curricula and rigorous standards. The school offers an
undergraduate program, leading to
the Bachelor of Arts degree, and the
Master of Arts Degree Program.
The Mount Sinai School of Medicine offers the M.D. and Ph.D.
degrees in addition to a combined
M.D./Ph.D. program in a rigorous
intellectual environment focused on
collaboration between faculty and
students. The school is committed to
training students to be not only outstanding clinicians and scientists but
compassionate individuals who also
serve science and society. The school
became affiliated with New York
University on July 1, 1999.
THE LIBRARIES
and Judaica and Hebraica. Specialized services include the Business
Reference Center, the Avery Fisher
Center for Music and Media, the
Tamiment Institute/Ben Josephson
Library on the history of radicalism,
the Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives
on the history of the New York City
labor movement, the New York University Archives, the Fales Library of
English and American Literature
since 1750, the Robert Frost Library,
the Berol Collection of Lewis Carroll
materials, the Downtown Writers
Collection, and numerous rare books
and manuscripts.
A computerized catalog, known
as BobCat for Bobst Library Catalog,
provides access to the libraries’ holdings. It may be searched in any of
the University libraries or over
NYUNET. Students can also connect
at computer workstations in the
library or from home to hundreds of
electronic journals, texts, and periodical databases through the Library’s
Web site, www.nyu.edu/library/bobst.
The Law Library contains over
751,000 volumes and is strong in a
variety of areas, including legal history, biography, jurisprudence, and
copyright, taxation, criminal, labor,
business, and international law
(including primary source materials of
the United Nations and European
Economic Community), plus emerging legal specialties such as urban
affairs, poverty law, and consumerism.
The Frederick L. Ehrman
Medical Library at the Medical
Center contains more than 174,000
volumes, 3,700 periodicals, computer software, and audiovisuals.
The John and Bertha E. Waldmann Memorial Library at the
College of Dentistry contains over
39,000 bound volumes and 570 periodicals, computer software, and
audiovisuals as well as one of the
largest collections of rare books on
dentistry in the country, including
the Weinberger Collection, the Blum
Collection, and the Mestel St. Apollonia Collection.
The Courant Institute of
Mathematical Sciences Library has
a highly specialized research collection of over 68,000 volumes in
mathematics, computer science, and
physics.
The Stephen Chan Library of
Fine Arts is a reference collection of
over 152,000 volumes in the history
of art of all periods, classical archaeology, and the conservation of paintings and sculpture.
Nine distinct libraries at the University contain approximately 4.4
million volumes.
The Elmer Holmes Bobst
Library and Study Center is one of
the largest open-stack research
libraries in the nation. Designed for
easy access, the library has more than
three million books and journals, plus
microforms, video- and audiotapes,
and other materials located in stacks
where students are free to browse.
The library also has hundreds of
study carrels interspersed among the
open book stacks plus five major
reading rooms; up to 3,500 students
may comfortably study here at any
one time. The stacks are open until
midnight, and study areas on the A
and B levels are open 24 hours during the academic year. The library has
networked carrels for personal laptop
access to research material and the
Internet. Laptop computers are also
available for use in the library.
Among the noteworthy collections of the Bobst Library are those
in American and English literature
and history, economics, education,
science, music, United Nations documents, Near Eastern and IberoAmerican languages and literatures,
INTRODUCTION
•
7
The Conservation Center
Library supports the research and
curricular needs of the Conservation
Center of the Institute of Fine Arts.
It is a highly specialized, noncirculating collection on the study of the
technology and conservation of works
of art and historic artifacts. It
includes approximately 14,000 volumes and 220 periodicals.
The Jack Brause Library of the
Real Estate Institute provides a
unique reference and research
resources of 1,900 volumes about the
New York real estate market to students and real estate professionals.
The Ettinghausen Library at
the Hagop Kevorkian Center is a
noncirculating reference collection,
the majority of which is included in
Bobcat. The collection also includes
representative area newspapers in
Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Hebrew,
and English.
The Grey Art Gallery, the University’s fine arts museum, presents
three to four innovative exhibitions
each year that encompass all aspects
of the visual arts: painting and sculpture, prints and drawings, photography, architecture and decorative arts,
video, film, and performance. The
gallery also sponsors lectures, seminars, symposia, and film showings in
conjunction with its exhibitions.
Admission to the gallery is free for
NYU staff, faculty, and students.
The New York University Art
Collection, founded in 1958, consists of more than 5,000 works in a
wide range of media. The collection
is comprised primarily of late-19thcentury and 20th-century works; its
particular strengths are American
painting from the 1940s to the present and 20th-century European
prints. A unique segment of the
NYU Art Collection is the Ben and
Abby Weed Grey Collection of Contemporary Asian and Middle Eastern
Art, which totals some 1,000 works
in various media representing countries from Israel to Japan.
If you would like more information on the Grey’s exhibitions, programs, and hours of operation, please
visit our Web site at www.nyu.edu/
greyart or call (212) 998-6780.
8
•
INTRODUCTION
THE LARGER CAMPUS
New York University is an integral
part of the metropolitan community
of New York City—the business, cultural, artistic, and financial center of
the nation and the home of the United Nations. The city’s extraordinary
resources enrich both the academic
programs and the experience of living
at New York University.
Professors whose extracurricular
activities include service as editors
for publishing houses and magazines;
as advisers to city government,
banks, school systems, and social
agencies; and as consultants for
museums and industrial corporations
bring to teaching an experience of
the world and a professional sophistication that are difficult to match.
Students also, either through
course work or in outside activities,
tend to be involved in the vigorous
and varied life of the city. Research
for term papers in the humanities
and social sciences may take them to
such diverse places as the American
Museum of Natural History, the
Museum of Modern Art, a garment
factory, a deteriorating neighborhood, or a foreign consulate.
Students in science work with
their professors on such problems of
immediate importance for urban
society as the pollution of waterways
and the congestion of city streets.
Business majors attend seminars in
corporation boardrooms and intern as
executive assistants in business and
financial houses. The schools, courts,
hospitals, settlement houses, theatres,
playgrounds, and prisons of the
greatest city in the world form a regular part of the educational scene for
students of medicine, dentistry, education, social work, law, business and
public administration, and the creative and performing arts.
The chief center for undergraduate and graduate study is at Washington Square in Greenwich Village,
long famous for its contributions to
the fine arts, literature, and drama,
and its personalized, smaller-scale,
European style of living. New York
University itself makes a significant
contribution to the creative activity
of the Village through the high concentration of faculty and students
who reside within a few blocks of the
University.
University apartment buildings
provide housing for more than 1,500
members of the faculty and administration, and University student residence halls accommodate over
11,500 men and women. Many more
faculty and students reside in private
housing in the area.
PRIVATE UNIVERSITY
Since its founding, New York University has been a private university.
It operates under a board of trustees
and derives its income from tuition,
endowment, grants from private
foundations and government, and
gifts from friends, alumni, corporations, and other private philanthropic
sources.
The University is committed to a
policy of equal treatment and opportunity in every aspect of its relations
with its faculty, students, and staff
members, without regard to age, citizenship status, color, disability, marital or parental status, national origin, race, religion, sex, or sexual orientation.
Inquiries regarding the application of the federal laws and regulations concerning affirmative action
and antidiscrimination policies and
procedures at New York University
may be referred to Sharon Weinberg,
Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs, New
York University, Elmer Holmes
Bobst Library, 70 Washington
Square South, Room 1202, New
York, NY 10012-1091; (212) 9982370. Inquiries may also be referred
to the director of the Office of Federal Contract Compliance, U.S.
Department of Labor.
New York University is a member of the Association of American
Universities and is accredited by the
Middle States Association of Colleges
and Schools (Commission on Higher
Education of the Middle State Association of Colleges and Schools, 3624
Market Street, Philadelphia, PA
19104; [215] 662-5606). Individual
undergraduate, graduate, and professional programs and schools are
accredited by the appropriate specialized accrediting agencies.
University
Administration
John E. Sexton, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
J.D., President
Norman Dorsen, B.A., LL.B.,
Counselor to the President
Farhad Kazemi, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D., Vice Provost for Global Affairs
David W. McLaughlin, B.S., M.S.,
Ph.D., Provost
Debra LaMorte, B.A., J.D., Senior
Vice President for Development and
Alumni Relations
Cheryl Mills, B.A., J.D., Counselor
for Operations
Jacob J. Lew, B.A., J.D., Executive
Vice President
S. Andrew Schaffer, B.A., LL.B.,
Senior Vice President, General Counsel,
and Secretary of the University
Robert Berne, B.S., M.B.A.,
Ph.D., Senior Vice President for Health
Richard Foley, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
Chair, University Committee on
Academic Priorities; Dean, Faculty
of Arts and Science
Deans
Richard N. Bing, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D., Vice President for Budget and
Resource Planning
Harvey J. Stedman, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D., Vice Chancellor
Lynne P. Brown, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D., Vice President for University
Relations and Public Affairs; Acting
Vice President for Student Affairs
Diane Yu, B.A., J.D., Chief of Staff
and Deputy to the President
Robert Goldfeld, B.A., LL.B., Vice
President for Administration
Michael C. Alfano, D.M.D., Ph.D.,
Dean, College of Dentistry
Suzanne England, B.S., M.S.W.,
Ph.D., M.B.A., Dean, Shirley M.
Ehrenkranz School of Social Work
Jo Ivey Boufford, B.A., M.D.,
Dean, Robert F. Wagner Graduate
School of Public Service
Mary Schmidt Campbell, B.A.,
M.A., Ph.D.; hon.: D.F.A., Ph.D.,
Dean, Tisch School of the Arts
Mary J. Carruthers, B.A., Ph.D.,
Dean for Humanities, Faculty of Arts
and Science
Frederick D. S. Choi, B.B.A.,
M.B.A., Ph.D., Dean, Undergraduate
College; Vice Dean, Leonard N. Stern
School of Business
George Daly, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
Dean, Leonard N. Stern School of Business
David F. Finney, B.A., M.A.,
Ed.D., Dean, School of Continuing and
Professional Studies
Richard Foley, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
Dean, Faculty of Arts and Science
Robert M. Glickman, B.A., M.D.,
Saul J. Farber Dean, New York
University School of Medicine and
Post-Graduate Medical School
Harold T. Read, B.S., M.B.A., Vice
President for Finance
Mary Sansalone, B.S., M.S., Ph.D.,
Vice President for Planning; Vice
Provost for Academic Initiatives
Jeannemarie Smith, B.A., M.B.A.,
Vice President for Fiscal Affairs
Richard Stanley, B.A., Executive
Vice Provost
Sharon L. Weinberg, A.B., Ph.D.,
Vice Provost for Faculty Affairs
Carol A. Mandel, B.A., M.A.,
M.S.L.S., Dean of Libraries
Ann Marcus, B.A.; M.Sc.
[London], Ed.D., Dean, The
Steinhardt School of Education
Richard L. Revesz, B.S.E., M.S.,
J.D., Dean, School of Law
Matthew S. Santirocco, B.A.;
M.A. [Cantab.], M.Phil., Ph.D.,
Dean, College of Arts and Science
Nathan Kase, M.D., Interim Dean,
Mount Sinai School of Medicine (affiliated)
Catharine R. Stimpson, B.A.;
B.A., M.A. [Cantab.], Ph.D.; hon.:
D.H.L., Hum.D., Litt.D., LL.D.,
Dean, Graduate School of Arts and Science
Peter Lennie, B.Sc. [Hull], Ph.D.
[Cantab.], Dean for Science, Faculty
of Arts and Science
E. Frances White, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D., Dean, Gallatin School of
Individualized Study
Leonard Boxer, B.S., LL.B.
Paul E. Francis, B.A., J.D.
John Brademas (President
Emeritus), B.A.; D.Phil. [Oxon.];
hon.: L.H.D., Litt.D., LL.D.
Paul J. Fribourg, B.A.
Kevin R. Brine, B.A., M.B.A.
Eric J. Gleacher, B.A., M.B.A.
Arthur L. Carter, B.A., M.B.A.
Norman Goodman, B.A., J.D.
Barry Diller
Richard A. Grasso, hon.: D.C.S.,
LL.D.
George W. Downs, B.A., Ph.D.,
Dean for Social Sciences, Faculty of
Arts and Science
Board of
Trustees
Martin Lipton, B.S. in Econ., LL.B.,
Chair
Diane Belfer
Marc H. Bell, B.S., M.S.
William R. Berkley, B.S., M.B.A.
Richard A. Bernstein, B.A.
Edward H. Bersoff, B.A., M.S.,
Ph.D.
Betty Weinberg Ellerin, B.A., J.D.
Ronald E. Blaylock, B.S., M.B.A.
Mary C. Farrell, B.A., M.B.A.
Mrs. Elmer H. Bobst, B.A., M.A.,
M.P.H.; hon.: L.H.D.
Laurence D. Fink, B.A., M.B.A.
Jay M. Furman, B.S., J.D.
Alan C. Greenberg, B.A.
H. Dale Hemmerdinger, B.A.
INTRODUCTION
•
9
Richard D. Katcher, B.A., LL.B.
Robert Rosenkranz, B.A., J.D.
Henry Taub, B.S.
Henry Kaufman, B.A., M.S.,
Ph.D.; hon.: L.H.D., LL.D.
E. John Rosenwald, Jr., B.A., M.B.A.
Laurence A. Tisch, B.S., M.B.A.
Baron Edouard de Rothschild,
M.B.A.
Preston Robert Tisch, B.A.
Richard Jay Kogan, B.A., M.B.A.
Kenneth G. Langone, B.A., M.B.A.
Brooke Garber Neidich, B.A.
L. Jay Oliva (President Emeritus),
B.A., M.A., Ph.D.; hon.: D.H.L.,
Litt.D., LL.D., Ph.D.
Life
Trustees
John L. Vogelstein
Henry R. Silverman, B.A., J.D.
Anthony Welters, B.A., J.D.
Larry A. Silverstein, B.A., LL.B.
Leonard A. Wilf, B.A., J.D., LL.M.
(in Taxation)
Joel E. Smilow, B.A., M.B.A.
Herbert M. Paul, B.B.A., M.B.A.,
J.D., LL.M.
Sheldon H. Solow
Lester Pollack, B.S., LL.B.
Jay Stein
Michael J. Rosenberg, B.A.,
M.B.A.
Joseph S. Steinberg, B.A., M.B.A.
Mrs. W. Vincent Astor, hon.: LL.D.
George H. Heyman, Jr., B.B.A.,
M.B.A.
Geraldine H. Coles
John J. Creedon, B.S., LL.B.,
LL.M.
Lewis L. Glucksman, B.A.,
M.B.A.
Maurice R. Greenberg, LL.B.;
hon.: J.D., LL.D.
Lillian Vernon
John E. Sexton, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
J.D.
Michael H. Steinhardt, B.S.
Helen L. Kimmel, B.A.
Robert F. Wright, B.A., M.B.A.
Martin J. Wygod, B.S.
William D. Zabel, B.A., LL.B.
Mortimer B. Zuckerman, B.A.,
M.B.A., LL.B., LL.M.
William R. Salomon
Marie Schwartz
Herbert R. Silverman, B.S., J.D.
George A. Murphy, B.A., M.B.A.,
LL.B.
Phyllis Cerf Wagner
Thomas S. Murphy, B.S.M.E.,
M.B.A.
Baroness Mariuccia
Zerilli-Marimò
Stanley C. Lesser, B.A., J.D.
Trustees
Associates
Bruce Berger, B.S.
Boris Kostelanetz, B.C.S., B.S., J.D.
Jane Eisner Bram, B.A., M.S.W.,
Ph.D.
Marvin Leffler, B.S., M.B.A.
College of Arts
and Science
Administration
Matthew S. Santirocco, B.A.; M.A.
[Cantab.], M.Phil., Ph.D.
Dean
Sally Sanderlin, B.A.; M.Litt.
[Dublin], Ph.D.
Associate Dean for Administration
Anne M. Blatz, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; International
Students
John A. Delgrosso, B.A., M.A.
Assistant Dean for Student Affairs
Otto Sonntag, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Debra Cabrera, B.A.
Student Services Coordinator
Anita Farrington-Brathwaite,
B.A., M.A.
Assistant Dean for Freshmen
Charlene Visconti, R.N., B.A., J.D.
Assistant Dean for Preprofessional
Advisement; Chairman, Committee on
Recommendations to Schools of the Health
Professions
Angie Carrillo, B.A., M.A.
Student Services Coordinator
Carolyn Bolt, B.A., M.A.
Director of Alumni Relations
Anthony Chiaravelotti, B.A., M.A.
Student Services Coordinator
Patti A. Boyd, B.A., M.A.
Assistant Director, College Advising
Center
Kevin Davis, B.A.
Executive Assistant to the Dean; Manager,
Special Projects
Richard J. Kalb, B.A., M.A.,
M.Div., Ph.D.
Associate Dean for Students
William J. Long, B.A., M.A.
Assistant Dean for Advisement and
Student Services
10
•
INTRODUCTION
Roger Chabot, B.A., M.S.W.
Counselor
Patricia Dognazzi, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; Academic
Standards
Deborah Fenster, B.A., M.S. Ed.
Assistant to the Dean; Prehealth Adviser
Ivelys Figueroa, B.A., M.A.
Student Services Coordinator
Michael Funk, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; Director, Academic
Achievement Program
Anita R. Gupta, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; Director, College
Learning Center
Joseph Hemmes, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; Academic
Adviser—Transfer and Engineering
Students
Faculty of Arts
and Science
Administration
Arts and Science
Board of
Overseers
Richard Foley, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.
Dean, Faculty of Arts and Science
Hilary Lieberman, B.A., M.A.,
Ph.D.
Assistant to the Associate Dean for
Students
James C. Mazza, B.A., M.A.,
M.Phil.
Student Services Coordinator
Aara Kupris Menzi, B.A., M.A.
Student Services Coordinator
Michele G. Mostel, B.A., M.A.
Assistant Director, Preprofessional
Advisement
Ellen Nantz, B.A.
Special Projects Coordinator
Crystal C. Parsons, B.S.
Administrative Assistant, Academic
Affairs
Diana Pittet, B.A., M.A.T.
Administrative Assistant to the Dean
Alexander Salazar, B.S., B.E.
Manager of College Information Systems
Nicole Phillips Sharpe, B.A., M.A.
Assistant to the Dean; Director of
Freshman Orientation
Tanisha Smalls
Budget Coordinator
Maria E. Suarez, B.A., C.S.W.
Counselor
Rose Olivito, B.F.A., M.A.
Administrative Assistant, Student
Affairs
George W. Downs, B.A., Ph.D.
Dean for Social Sciences, Faculty of Arts
and Science
Matthew S. Santirocco, B.A.; M.A.
[Cantab.], M.Phil., Ph.D.
Dean, College of Arts and Science
Peter Lennie, B.Sc. [Hull], Ph.D.
[Cantab.]
Dean for Science, Faculty of Arts and
Science
Catharine R. Stimpson, B.A.; B.A.,
M.A. [Cantab.], Ph.D.; hon.: D.H.L.,
Hum.D., Litt.D., LL.D.
Dean, Graduate School of Arts and
Science
Dr. Mona R. Ackerman
President, Riklis Family Foundation
Loretta B. Glucksman
President, Westland Associates
Dr. Edward H. Bersoff
President and Chief Executive Officer,
BTG, Inc.
Henry Anatole Grunwald
Former Editor-in-Chief, Time, Inc.
Joseph A. Rice
Former Chairman and Chief Executive
Officer, Irving Trust
Mary J. Caruthers, B.A., Ph.D.
Dean for Humanities, Faculty of Arts
and Science
Gerald R. Sigal
Chairman of the Board, Sigal Construction Corporation
David A. Bronner, Esq.
Katten, Muchin & Zavis
Robert E. Holmes, Esq.
Executive Vice President, Sony Pictures
Entertainment
Arthur Carter
President, The Shephaug Corporation
Yves-Andre Istel
Vice Chairman, Rothschild, Inc.
Evan R. Chesler, Esq.
Partner, Cravath, Swaine and Moore
Ronald S. Katz, Esq.
Managing Partner, Coudert Brothers
Rose Styron
Writer
James A. Finkelstein
JAF Communications
Faith Popcorn
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer,
BrainReserve, Inc.
Lillian Vernon
President, Lillian Vernon Corporation
James B. Sitrick, Esq.
Coudert Brothers
Margaret Sokol
INTRODUCTION
•
11
1 2
•
C O L L E G E
O F
A RT S
A N D
S C I E N C E
A B R I E F H I S T O RY O F T H E
College of Arts and Science
T
he history of the College of Arts and Science begins with the founding of the
University by a number of prominent New Yorkers, led by Albert Gallatin, a member of Jefferson’s cabinet. Unlike other institutions at the time, it was to be nonsectarian and to produce a different sort of elite citizen, not born to privilege but set apart
for leadership by talent and effort. To that end it provided a more practical education, what
the 19th century called “Useful Knowledge.”
Thus, in addition to offering the standard classical curriculum, early NYU was also
a center for science. Samuel F. B. Morse, after whom the current core curriculum is named,
invented the telegraph while teaching art and design; John W. Draper invented modern
photography; and the American Chemical Society was founded here.
In the arts and culture, too, it can be argued that the College not only participated
in but also generated much of the creative energy that has characterized Greenwich Village.
The original University Building housed ateliers that were the forerunners of the current
downtown art scene. And although Henry Wadsworth Longfellow was turned down for a
teaching post, literature thrived, with University Building even featured in a 1861 novel by
Theodore Winthrop.
Finally, this neighborhood and this institution have had a long tradition of social
and political activism—from the Stonecutters Riot over the construction of the University’s
first building in 1834 to the tragic Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911, a major event
in U.S. labor history that took place in what is now the Brown Building.
From its earliest days, then, the College on Washington Square has been at the
cutting edge of intellectual, cultural, and social developments. In 1895, however, NYU’s
great chancellor, Henry MacCracken, decided to reserve Washington Square for the professional schools, which had proliferated under his leadership, and to move University College
to a beautiful campus in the Bronx—University Heights—designed by Stanford White.
The College’s move to the Heights reflected MacCracken’s “Ivy” aspirations for the
school and his successful effort to raise quality by attracting the best students nationally.
Also relevant was the ascendant, nonurban collegiate ideal of a residential community, with
fine teaching, extracurricular activities, fraternities, and intercollegiate athletics.
A few years later an undergraduate presence was restored downtown with the opening of a Collegiate Division (1903), soon to become Washington Square College (1913).
This school had a more diverse student body, opening its doors to women, recent immigrants, commuters, and professional students.
For over 60 years, undergraduate liberal arts education at NYU took place in two locations—University College (and the Engineering School) at the Heights and the College on
Washington Square, both offering excellent, but different, educational and social experiences.
COLLEGE
OF
ARTS
AND
SCIENCE
•
13
In the 1970s the College underwent yet another major transformation. In response to financial pressures, the Heights campus closed in
1973 and University College
merged with Washington Square
College. The new institution, which
is now known simply as the College
of Arts and Science, is the beneficiary of both traditions—the Heights’
residential and collegiate culture and
the Square’s progressive urban focus.
At that time, a decision was also
made to build aggressively for quali-
1 4
•
C O L L E G E
O F
A RT S
ty—to recruit the very best faculty
and students, to update and expand
the physical plant, and to create distinguished programs both here and
abroad.
In recent years the College has
become recognized as a national
leader for its efforts to reinvent a liberal arts education for the 21st century. With a challenging liberal arts
core, the Morse Academic Plan, at
the center of its curriculum, the
College emphasizes student inquiry
and research, offers unique opportu-
A N D
S C I E N C E
nities for international and preprofessional study, and makes use of the
city as a site for learning and service.
A liberal arts education thus reconceived is not only personally enriching but also eminently practical in
developing the skills and perspectives essential to assume a leadership
role in the 21st century. As the new
millennium proceeds, the College
continues to build on its founders’
goal of providing “Useful
Knowledge.”
COLLEGE
OF
ARTS
AND
SCIENCE
•
15
College Directory
Administrators
Services
Matthew S. Santirocco
Dean
Silver Center, Room 910
(212) 998-8100
E-mail: [email protected]
Anita Farrington-Brathwaite
Assistant Dean for Freshmen
Silver Center, Room 909C
(212) 998-8167
E-mail: [email protected]
Sally Sanderlin
Associate Dean for Administration
Silver Center, Room 910
(212) 998-8100
E-mail: [email protected]
Carolyn Bolt
Director of Alumni Relations
25 West Fourth Street, 5th Floor
(212) 998-6954
E-mail: [email protected]
Richard J. Kalb
Associate Dean for Students
Silver Center, Room 909B
(212) 998-8140
E-mail: [email protected]
Otto Sonntag
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs
Silver Center, Room 908C
(212) 998-8110
E-mail: [email protected]
John A. Delgrosso
Assistant Dean for Student Affairs
Silver Center, Room 909A
(212) 998-8146
E-mail: [email protected]
William J. Long
Assistant Dean for Advisement and
Student Services
Silver Center, Room 905
(212) 998-8130
E-mail: [email protected]
Charlene Visconti
Assistant Dean for Preprofessional
Advisement
Silver Center, Room 904
(212) 998-8160
E-mail: [email protected]
Office of Undergraduate
Admissions
22 Washington Square North
(212) 998-4500
University Counseling Service
College of Arts and Science
Silver Center, Room 920
(212) 998-8150
Office of the University Registrar
Student Services Center
25 West Fourth Street, 1st Floor
(212) 998-4800
Office for African American,
Latino, and Asian American
Student Services
31 West Fourth Street, 3rd Floor
(212) 998-4343
Office of Financial Aid
Student Services Center
25 West Fourth Street, 1st Floor
(212) 998-4444
Student Employment and
Internship Center
5 Washington Place, 2nd Floor
(212) 998-4757
University Health Center
726 Broadway, 3rd Floor
(212) 443-1000
Office of Student Life
31 West Fourth Street, 2nd Floor
(212) 998-4959
Office of Housing and Residence
Life (on campus)
8 Washington Place
(212) 443-1000
NYU Study Abroad Admissions
7 East 12th Street, 6th Floor
(212) 998-4433
[email protected]
Office of the Bursar
Student Services Center
25 West Fourth Street, 1st Floor
(212) 998-2800
Office of Career Services (OCS)
719 Broadway, 3rd Floor
(212) 998-4730
Career Assistance Program (CAP)
Silver Center, Room 901
(212) 998-8147
University Counseling Service
726 Broadway, Room 471
(212) 998-4780
Off-Campus Housing Office
4 Washington Square Village, 1st
Floor
(212) 998-4620
Office for International Students
and Scholars
561 La Guardia Place, 1st Floor
(212) 998-4720
COLLEGE
DIRECTORY
•
17
Calendar 2002-2004
2002
2002 Summer Session I
Monday–Friday
May 20–June 28
All dates inclusive
Memorial Day: holiday
Monday
May 27
2002 Summer Session II
Monday–Friday
July 1–August 9
Independence Day: holiday
Thursday
July 4
Labor Day: holiday
Monday
September 2
Fall term begins
Wednesday
September 4
Last day for withdrawing from a
course without a “W”
Tuesday
September 24
Last day for filing or revoking
Pass/Fail option
Tuesday
October 8
Last day for withdrawing from a course
Tuesday
November 5
Thanksgiving recess
Thursday–Saturday
November 28–30
Last day of classes; Legislative Day
Wednesday
December 11*
Reading day
Thursday
December 12
Fall term final examinations
Friday–Friday
December 13–20
Winter recess
Saturday–Saturday
December 21–January 18
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day: holiday
Monday
January 20
Spring term begins
Tuesday
January 21
Last day for withdrawing from a
course without a “W”
Monday
February 10
Presidents’ Day: holiday
Monday
February 17
Last day for filing or revoking
Pass/Fail option
Monday
February 24
Spring recess
Monday–Saturday
March 17–22
Last day for withdrawing from a course
Monday
March 31
Founders Day
Sunday
April 13
2003
*All Thursday classes will meet on Wednesday, December 11. Therefore, Wednesday classes do not meet on this day.
18
•
CALENDAR
2004
Last day of classes
Monday
May 5
Reading day
Tuesday
May 6
Spring term final examinations
Wednesday–Wednesday
May 7–14
Commencement: conferring of degrees
Thursday
May 15
2003 Summer Session I
Monday–Friday
May 19–June 27
Memorial Day: holiday
Monday
May 26
2003 Summer Session II
Monday–Friday
June 30–August 8
Independence Day: holiday
Friday
July 4
Labor Day: holiday
Monday
September 1
Fall term begins
Tuesday
September 2
Last day for withdrawing from a
course without a “W”
Monday
September 22
Last day for filing or revoking
Pass/Fail option
Monday
October 6
Last day for withdrawing from a course
Monday
November 3
Thanksgiving recess
Thursday–Saturday
November 27–29
Last day of classes; Legislative Day
Tuesday
December 9*
Reading days
Wednesday-Thursday
December 10–11
Fall term final examinations
Friday–Friday
December 12–19
Winter recess
Saturday–Saturday
December 20–January 17
Martin Luther King, Jr. Day: holiday
Monday
January 19
Spring term begins
Tuesday
January 20
Last day for withdrawing from a
course without a “W”
Monday
February 9
Presidents’ Day: holiday
Monday
February 16
Last day for filing or revoking
Pass/Fail option
Monday
February 23
Spring recess
Monday–Saturday
March 15–20
Last day for withdrawing from a course
Monday
March 29
Founders Day
Sunday
April 18
Last day of classes
Monday
May 3
*All Thursday classes will meet on Tuesday, December 9. Therefore, Tuesday classes do not meet on this day.
CALENDAR
•
19
Reading day
Tuesday
May 4
Spring term final examinations
Wednesday–Wednesday
May 5–12
Commencement: conferring of degrees
Thursday
May 13
2004 Summer Session I
Monday–Friday
May 17–June 25
Memorial Day: holiday
Monday
May 31
2004 Summer Session II
Monday–Friday
June 28–August 6
Independence Day: holiday
Monday
July 5
Labor Day: holiday
Monday
September 6
Additional Important Calendar Dates:
1. For refund schedule, see under “Refund Period Schedule” in the Tuition, Expenses, and Financial Aid section of this
bulletin.
2. For registration and drop/add schedules, consult the College Advising Center, Silver Center, 100 Washington Square
East, Room 905; (212) 998-8130.
20
•
CALENDAR
Index to Majors and Minors
T
he index found below indicates the full range of majors and minors available to students in the College. Individual courses are described under each departmental section of the bulletin. See also the Preprofessional, Accelerated, and Specialized Programs
section of this bulletin.
The B.A. degree is offered in all the majors listed below except in that of neural science. The B.S. degree is offered in the majors in chemistry, neural science, and physics; as
part of the B.S./B.E. program with Stevens Institute of Technology, it is also offered in biology, computer science, and mathematics.
Unless otherwise noted, both majors and minors are available in the following:
HEGIS*
number
Africana Studies
2211
Ancient Studies (minor only)
Anthropology
Anthropology and Classical
Civilization (major only)
2202
2299
Anthropology and Linguistics
(major only)
4903
Asian/Pacific/American Studies
(minor only)
Astronomy (minor only)
HEGIS*
number
Economics and Mathematics
(major only)
1799
2210
Irish Studies (minor only)
Italian
1104
Engineering (majors only)†
†Chemical Engineering
†Civil Engineering
†Computer Engineering
†Electrical Engineering
†Engineering Physics
†Environmental Engineering
†Mechanical Engineering
Italian and Linguistics
(major only)
1199
Jewish History and
Civilization
0399
Journalism and Mass
Communication
0602
Language and Mind
(major only)
4903
Latin American Studies
(major only)
0308
0414
Biology
0401
Chemistry
1905
English and American
Literature
1502
Classical Civilization
2203
European Studies
0310
Fine Arts
1001
French
1102
1199
Classics-Fine Arts (major only) 1001
International Relations
(major only)
Education (minor only; through the
Steinhardt School of Education and
CAS)
Biochemistry (major only)
Classical Civilization and
Hellenic Studies (major only) 1504
HEGIS*
number
Latin/Greek
1109/1110
Law and Society (minor only)
Linguistics and Languages
1101
Literature in Translation
(minor only)
Comparative Literature
1503
French and Linguistics
(major only)
Computer Science
0701
Gender and Sexuality Studies 4903
Luso-Brazilian Language and
Literature
1199
German
1103
Mathematics
1701
German and Linguistics
(major only)
1199
Mathematics and
Computer Science
1799
Earth and Environmental Science
(minor only)
Hebrew Language and
Literature
1111
Medieval and Renaissance
Studies
4903
East Asian Studies
0302
Hellenic Studies
0399
Metropolitan Studies
2214
Economics
2204
History
2205
Middle Eastern Studies
1101
Creative Writing (minor only)
Dramatic Literature, Theatre
History, and the Cinema
1007
INDEX
TO
MAJORS
AND
MINORS
•
21
Music
1005
Russian
Neural Science (major only)
0425
Philosophy
1509
Social Work (minor only; through
Shirley M. Ehrenkranz School of
Social Work and CAS)
Physics
1902
Sociology
2208
Politics
2207
Spanish
1105
Spanish and Linguistics
(major only)
1199
Pre-Business Studies (minor only)
Psychology
2001
Public Policy (minor only)
Classification
of Courses
Religious Studies
1510
Romance Languages
(major only)
1101
1106
Studio Art (minor only; available to
fine arts majors and urban design
and architecture studies majors only,
through the Steinhardt School of
Education)
icy in this matter may be indicated
in this bulletin or in the Graduate
School of Arts and Science section of
the directory of classes, which is
available during each registration
period.
Hyphenated courses (e.g., V77.01010102) are full-year courses. Each
term is registered for individually,
but no credit is granted for completing only the first term of the
full-year course. In the designation
22
AND
INDEX
TO
MAJORS
*HEGIS: Higher Education General
Information Survey. Degree and Certificate
Programs as Registered by the New York State
Education Department.
New York State Education DepartmentOffice
of Higher Education and the Professions
Cultural Education Center, Room 5B28
Albany, NY 12230
Telephone: (518) 474-5851
†In dual degree program with Stevens Institute
of Technology.
Urban Design and Architecture
Studies
2214
The bulletin contains descriptions of
the College’s departments, programs, and courses. Each course is
assigned a letter prefix followed by a
number. The prefix V indicates
undergraduate courses offered in the
College; G indicates a graduate
course offered by the Graduate
School of Arts and Science.
Graduate courses open to qualified
undergraduates are designated by the
departments. The departmental pol-
•
West European Studies (minor only)
MINORS
of a course where the numbers indicating each half of the course are
separated by a comma, not a
hyphen, credit will be granted for
completing only the first term of
the course unless it is indicated otherwise. Students should be aware
that in certain of these courses, satisfactory completion of the first
term of the course is a prerequisite
for entry into the second term of the
course.
The Morse Academic Plan
DIRECTOR OF THE MORSE
ACADEMIC PLAN:
Professor Myers
DIRECTOR OF THE
EXPOSITORY WRITING PROGRAM:
Professor Hoy
Program
T
he Morse Academic Plan (MAP) of the College of Arts and Science is an integrated
general education curriculum in the liberal arts. The MAP is named for Samuel F. B.
Morse, an early faculty member of the University. Best known as inventor of the telegraph, Morse taught fine arts at NYU and was an eminent painter. In his breadth of talent
and high achievement as both an artist and scientist, Morse symbolizes the range of skills and
interests that the MAP is designed to foster.
The MAP provides a core academic experience for undergraduates at NYU. Through
a challenging array of foundational courses the program heightens cultural awareness, hones
critical reading skills, promotes creative and logical thinking, and gives students extensive
practice writing and speaking English and proficiency in at least one other language. Rather
than specifying a fixed canon of knowledge, the MAP focuses on modes and methods of
humanistic and scientific inquiry. In each case, students are free to pursue particular interests
by choosing among a number of courses. Students examine our contemporary culture—its
origins and social structures, its modes of expression, and its inherent diversity and evolving
patterns of thought. In other classes, they consider the place and importance of modern
science—its quantitative and analytical foundations, its processes of reasoning, and its
relationship to technology and to our views of the natural world. By helping them to broaden their perspectives, gain new pathways for intellectual inquiry, and develop the skills,
background, and social awareness to thrive in dynamic circumstances, the MAP thus seeks to
prepare students for their later studies and to equip them well for lives as thinking individuals and members of society.
The MAP has four components:
1. the Expository Writing Program,
2. study of foreign language,
3. the Foundations of Contemporary
Culture (FCC), and
4. the Foundations of Scientific
Inquiry (FSI).
Though structured and integrated, the MAP curriculum affords students flexibility in a number of ways.
It permits the following:
• choice of different tracks (foreign
language, FCC, FSI),
• satisfaction of some courses by
examination or Advanced Placement
credit (foreign language, FSI), and
• substitution of departmental courses (FCC, FSI).
Given this flexibility, students
will work individually with advisers
to plan course schedules that take
into account, among other things,
their past preparation, current interests, and longer-term goals. While
there is no prescribed schedule of
courses that will be appropriate for
every student, the following broad
guidelines should be kept in mind.
• Incoming freshmen should normal-
MORSE
ly complete their MAP courses by
the end of sophomore year. This will
leave them free in the junior and
senior years to focus on their major
and elective courses. Some science
majors, engineering students, premedical students, and students
placed in the International Writing
Workshop sequence may need to
delay starting, and thus finishing, a
component of the MAP for a semester or more. Students who pursue
international study may also need to
delay completing their MAP courses
beyond the sophomore year.
ACADEMIC
PLAN
•
23
Expository
Writing
Foreign
Language
• Students must complete Writing
the Essay, V40.0100, during their
first year. Those placed into the Prose
Writing or International Writing
Workshop sequences must begin in
their first semester and must register
for their remaining writing course(s)
in the semester(s) immediately
following.
• Although Freshman Honors
Seminars, V50.02xx, are not a part of
the MAP, qualifying students are
strongly urged to register for one of
these classes in their first semester.
These seminars with distinguished
faculty members promise an intellectually stimulating experience right at
the start of college.
• In designing the MAP, the faculty
sought to assure that all students
would receive a broad exposure to the
liberal arts early in their college
careers. With this wide academic
horizon, the MAP encourages students to discover new intellectual
interests outside their intended areas
of specialization and to pursue those
interests with elective courses outside
their majors in their later undergraduate years.
It would be hard to exaggerate the
value of the ability to communicate
clearly and effectively in writing. The
Expository Writing Program at
NYU assumes that writing is not
merely a useful skill but also a way of
learning and knowing. Its courses
focus on the examination of evidence,
the development of ideas, and the
clear expression of those ideas in a
variety of different kinds of essays. In
these writing courses students routinely move from exploration to
argument as they read and make use
of various texts—written, visual,
experiential—to create a spectrum of
persuasive essays. Examined texts
become more complex, the writing
tasks more difficult as students grapple with intriguing questions that
lead to richer ideas and more interesting forms of expression. The essays
students write become more formal
and argumentative as the semester’s
work progresses.
For a complete description of the
curriculum, see the Expository Writing
Program (40) section of this bulletin.
The study of foreign languages is an
integral part of a liberal arts education. It nurtures an awareness of the
diversity of human culture and serves
the practical need for language skills
in fields such as government, business, and research. New York
University is a particularly exciting
setting for language study because of
its location in a great cosmopolitan
city, its international student body, its
many renowned language programs
and centers, and its rapidly expanding
opportunities for study abroad.
In addition to the foreign language courses offered for academic
credit, the College offers opportunities for students of modern languages
to practice their skills in real-world
situations outside the classroom.
NYU Speaking Freely is a free, noncredit program that allows students
to practice their speaking and aural
comprehension skills and to explore
the linguistically diverse cultures of
New York City. For more information about this popular program,
contact the Office of the Associate
Dean for Students, Silver Center,
Room 909.
Increasingly, college graduates
must be prepared to function in a
global society. Apart from the inherent interest of learning about other
cultures, many NYU students take
the opportunity to study or travel
abroad as preparation for their future
careers. For more information about
NYU Study Abroad Programs, visit
the Student Center for International
Study, Silver Center, Room 904, and
consult the Programs Abroad section
of this bulletin.
Requirement. To fulfill the foreign language component of the
Morse Academic Plan, students must
show or attain proficiency in a foreign language through the intermediate level. Ordinarily, this is accomplished by the successful completion
of two years of language study in the
College, through the second semester
of a regular intermediate-level language sequence. Some languages are
also taught in intensive courses,
allowing students to complete the
equivalent of two years of study in a
single year.
After two years of college language study or the equivalent
demonstrated proficiency, students
should have gained a broad competence in a language; but true fluency
of written or oral expression will not
usually have been developed at this
point. For this reason, all students
are encouraged to continue their language study beyond the intermediate
level. In particular, students studying
modern languages will find it most
beneficial to immerse themselves in
the living culture of a language by
studying, traveling, or working
abroad. Likewise, students of all languages, whether ancient or modern,
are encouraged to continue their
studies with elective courses in literature at the advanced level.
Exemptions. Students may fulfill
the foreign language component of
the MAP by presenting outstanding
scores on the SAT II or Advanced
Placement Examinations or by passing a departmental proficiency examination. For further information on
language placement and exemption,
see under “Placement Examinations”
in the Academic Policies section of this
bulletin. For Advanced Placement
Examination equivalencies, consult
the chart in the Admissions section,
also in this bulletin.
Students whose secondary schooling was in a language other than
English and other than a language
offered in the College, or who complete the International Writing
Workshop sequence (V40.0003,
V40.0004, V40.0009), are exempt
from the foreign language requirement. Also exempt are students in
the B.S./B.E. program.
Courses. Listed below are courses
covering the second semester of the
intermediate level of language study.
Intensive courses, which allow students to complete the equivalent of
two years of study in a single year, are
also listed where available.
Completion of any of the following
courses will fulfill the foreign language requirement. Please consult the
individual departmental listings for
information on prerequisite courses.
24
•
MORSE
ACADEMIC
PLAN
Intermediate Swahili II (Africana
Studies) V11.0204
Intensive Intermediate Italian
(Italian) V59.0020
Intermediate Latin: Virgil
(Classics) V27.0006
Intermediate Arabic II (Middle
Eastern) V77.0104
Intermediate Greek: Homer
(Classics) V27.0010
Intermediate Persian II (Middle
Eastern) V77.0404
Intermediate Chinese II (East
Asian) V33.0204
Intermediate Hindi/Urdu (Middle
Eastern) V77.0408
Intermediate Japanese II (East
Asian) V33.0250
Intermediate Turkish II (Middle
Eastern) V77.0504
Intermediate Korean II (East
Asian) V33.0257
Intermediate Hebrew II (Hebrew
and Judaic) V78.0004
Intermediate Cantonese II (East
Asian) V33.0413
Intermediate Portuguese II
(Spanish and Portuguese)
V87.0004
Intermediate French II (French)
V45.0012
Intensive Intermediate French
(French) V45.0020
Intermediate German II (German)
V51.0004
Intensive Intermediate German
(German) V51.0020
Intermediate Modern Greek II
(Hellenic Studies) V56.0106
Intermediate Modern Irish II
(Irish) V58.0103
Intermediate Italian II (Italian)
V59.0012
Foundations of
Contemporary
Culture
The Foundations of Contemporary
Culture (FCC) sequence of the Morse
Academic Plan is a series of four
coordinated courses in the humanities
and social sciences. Within each of
the four offerings, students are free to
pursue their particular interests
through their choice of individual
classes. Overall, the structure of the
FCC ensures that every student in the
College gains a common core of skills
and experiences in the liberal arts.
In addition to the information on
the Foundations of Contemporary
Culture provided in this bulletin,
detailed descriptions of each year’s
course offerings may be found in the
MAP brochure, published annually
as a supplement to this bulletin.
CONVERSATIONS OF THE
WEST
Through exploration of contrasting
and complementary works in the
humanities from different periods,
Conversations of the West provides a
historical, literary, and philosophical
context for education in the liberal
Intensive Intermediate
Portuguese for Spanish Speakers
(Spanish and Portuguese)
V87.0021
Intermediate Russian II (Russian
and Slavic) V91.0004
Intermediate Czech II (Russian
and Slavic) V91.0204
Russian Grammar Review for
Native Speakers (Russian and
Slavic) V91.0005
Intermediate Spanish II (Spanish
and Portuguese) V95.0004
arts. Students may choose from four
tracks: Antiquity and the Middle
Ages, Antiquity and the Renaissance,
Antiquity and the Enlightenment,
and Antiquity and the 19th Century.
In each case, the classes begin with
works from some of the ancient civilizations that have shaped the development of cultures in the West.
Typically, the classes have the following readings in common: the books
of Genesis and Exodus from the
Hebrew Scriptures, the Gospel
According to Luke and Acts of the
Apostles from the Christian New
Testament, a Platonic dialogue and a
Sophoclean or Euripidean tragedy,
Virgil’s Aeneid, and Augustine’s
Confessions. In the second half of the
course, the themes and ideas emerging from these texts are followed as
they are maintained, reinterpreted, or
disputed by later thinkers.
Conversations of the West is not
a survey but, rather, an examination
of how texts influence subsequent
thinking, create traditions, and
reflect societal ideals. Conversations
MORSE
Intensive Intermediate Spanish
(Spanish and Portuguese)
V95.0020
Intermediate Tagalog II
(Asian/Pacific/American)
V15.0404
Each department offering language instruction in the College has
designated a member of its faculty to
coordinate its courses and policies.
For more information on specific language classes, placement, or exemption, please contact the language
coordinator, director of language programs, or director of undergraduate
studies named in the individual
departmental listings.
Thanks to an exchange arrangement with Columbia University, students may also enroll in the following languages, offered through the
intermediate level and given at
Columbia: Armenian, Bengali,
Finnish, Hungarian, Lithuanian,
Polish, Punjabi, Romanian, Sanskrit,
Serbo-Croatian, Swedish, Tamil,
Modern Tibetan, Ukrainian, Uzbek,
and Wolof.
For information about these
courses, visit the Office of Academic
Affairs, Silver Center, Room 908.
of the West thus aims to provide a
richer understanding of how cultures
are constructed, modified, and represented.
WORLD CULTURES
The World Cultures courses introduce students to the ways in which
cultural traditions are created and
the ways in which cultures define
themselves against internal and
external alternatives. These courses
introduce students to the methods
and problems of cultural studies.
Like Conversations of the West,
World Cultures is not intended as a
set of historical surveys. Each course
is designed to examine the challenges of “translation”—of appreciating cultural traditions other than
one’s own; to introduce students to
the major texts, artifacts, and values
of another cultural tradition; and to
develop a sense of the diversity and
similarity of the ways in which people in different cultural traditions
understand, experience, and imagine
their lives.
ACADEMIC
PLAN
•
25
SOCIETIES AND THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Over the past several centuries, enormous social transformations have
taken place around the world. To
understand the complexity of these
phenomena, new methods have been
developed to study societal structures
and human behavior. Each of the
courses under Societies and the Social
Sciences begins from a particular disciplinary approach, social concern, or
topic, in order to orient students to
the characteristic methods of these
social sciences. Students learn how
issues are objectified for study, how
data are collected and analyzed, and
Foundations of
Scientific
Inquiry
The Foundations of Scientific Inquiry
(FSI) component of the Morse
Academic Plan is a series of three
coordinated courses in quantitative
reasoning and the natural sciences.
Together, these courses ensure that
every student in the College gains a
fundamental understanding of how
mathematics and laboratory experimentation advance scientific investigation. While some students acquire
this background through course
work offered in the science majors,
FSI courses are especially designed to
meet the need of nonscience students. Within each of the three offerings, students are free to pursue their
particular interests through their
choice of individual classes.
In addition to the information on
the Foundations of Scientific Inquiry
provided in this bulletin, detailed
descriptions of each year’s course
offerings may be found in the MAP
brochure, published annually as a
supplement to this bulletin.
QUANTITATIVE REASONING
Students in Quantitative Reasoning
engage mathematical concepts in a
26
•
MORSE
ACADEMIC
how new understanding is thereby
achieved. Whether through an interdisciplinary approach, consideration
of their historical development, or
reflection on critical and positivistic
debates, the courses help students
both to appreciate the unique
insights afforded by these methods
and to recognize the limits of such
inquiry. In this way, students move
beyond the particular focus of the
class to a broader understanding of
methods and problems in the social
sciences generally.
EXPRESSIVE CULTURE
variety of contexts in the natural or
social sciences. All courses include a
substantial amount of problem solving that requires both conceptual and
computational work.
ing of the universe. Wherever
possible the courses relate science to
societal problems and develop a historical perspective.
In Expressive Culture students
explore the complexities of artistic
expression by focusing on one of five
media: sounds, images, words, performance, or film. Each course introduces requisite historical, formal, and
critical vocabularies; examines fundamental issues associated with interpretation of the arts making use of
these media; and investigates the
complex relations between artistic
expression and other facets of social
organization. The courses also make
use, whenever possible, of the rich
cultural resources of New York City.
NATURAL SCIENCE II
NATURAL SCIENCE I
Scientific knowledge has its basis in
our natural curiosity about the world
around us and our place in it. These
courses approach the physical sciences with the intent of asking and
trying to answer interesting questions, dealing with topics ranging
from the origin of our universe and
planet to how human activity affects
our environment. Students consider
the important roles played by laws of
physics and chemistry in biology,
earth and environmental sciences,
astrophysics, and cosmology and
develop an understanding of how the
physical sciences inform the natural
sciences generally. Mathematics is
introduced in each course with frequent applications to the subject
matter. Predictions that can be made
only with the use of mathematics are
clearly delineated, showing the powerful role it plays in our understand-
PLAN
The complexity of the biological
realm continues to fascinate and challenge modern scientists, who are currently engaged in such diverse pursuits as exploring the organization
and function of the brain, reconstructing the origin of the human
species, linking the multiplicity of
interactions in ecosystems, and deciphering the influence of heredity on
complex traits. The courses in
Natural Science II take a nontraditional approach to the life sciences,
with an emphasis on approaching science as a dynamic process of investigation and discovery. Each course
selects a broad theme that is at the
forefront of contemporary research,
then uses specific questions and
examples to introduce students to the
methodology of scientific inquiry, the
critical evaluation of results, and the
mathematical tools used to quantify
scientific information.
PROGRAM IN
Africana Studies (11)
2 6 9 M E R C E R S T R E E T, S U I T E 6 0 1 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 7 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 2 1 3 0 .
DIRECTOR OF THE
PROGRAM:
Professor Diawara
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF
THE PROGRAM
Robert Hinton
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Professor Diawara
T
he Program in Africana Studies offers a wide range of courses on the black experience in the modern world, emphasizing the interdisciplinary approach of cultural
studies. The program’s two main areas are Pan-African history and thought and
black urban studies. Pan-African history and thought includes the study of such literary and
political movements as the Harlem Renaissance, the Negritude movement, black consciousness, black feminism, and black intellectual leaders such as W. E. B. Du Bois, Zora
Neale Hurston, C. L. R. James, Malcolm X, Angela Davis, Leopold Senghor, and Kwame
Nkrumah. Black urban studies focuses on the cultural analysis of black people’s relations to
a wide range of social, cultural, and political institutions such as museums, public offices,
music and sports industries, mass media, the police, and public schools. Black urban studies also explores patterns of black migration, black cultural productions, and questions of
class and gender dynamics within black communities.
New York’s position as an international crossroads allows the program to bring
prestigious scholars and artists for visits of six weeks to one year. Students, faculty, and
members of the surrounding community interact with such guests through courses, presentation of works in progress, and performances in order to capture the international dimension of Pan-Africanism.
Faculty
Professors:
Dash, Diawara, Kelley, Taylor,
Willis-Kennedy
Associate Professors:
Guerrero, Wantchekon
Assistant Professors:
Amkpa, Blake
Program
MAJOR
2. Four courses as follows: (a) two
history courses covering Africa and
the diaspora; (b) one approved
Africana course in a social science
discipline; and (c) one survey course
in African diaspora philosophy, religion, or the arts
3. Two additional courses from
one of the three concentrations or
from an African language
4. One approved elective
5. One senior seminar
MINOR
The major consists of nine courses. It
is structured around the following
three concentrations: (a) history; (b)
social sciences; and (c) philosophy,
religion, and the arts. An introduction to Pan-Africanism or to black
urban studies and a senior-level
seminar is required. The nine courses
must be distributed as follows:
1. Introduction to Pan-Africanism, V11.0010, or Introduction to
Black Urban Studies, V11.0020
Four courses in Africana studies,
including either V11.0010 or
V11.0020.
HONORS PROGRAM
Students who maintain a grade point
average of at least 3.5 in Africana
studies courses and at least 3.5 overall and who complete a senior Honors Thesis may be awarded their
degree with honors.
AFRICANA
STUDIES
•
27
Courses
Introduction to Pan-Africanism
V11.0010 4 points.
Deals with the history of Pan-Africanism and its impact on the modern
world. Focuses on the major themes of
Pan-Africanism, including those of
African unity, black rebellion against
colonialism and racism, black diaspora, and black culture. Also considers
the relations between Pan-Africanism
and such movements as nationalism,
Marxism, and Afrocentricity.
Introduction to Black Urban
Studies
V11.0020 Identical to V99.0105.
4 points.
Introduces students to the tools of
cultural criticism and theory, with
particular emphasis on black culture,
urban environment, and black people’s relationships to a variety of
social and cultural institutions and
practices. The latter may include the
mass media, class and poverty, the
police, urban development, education, music, art, and sports.
African American 20th-Century
Novels and Narratives
V11.0139 4 points.
This seminar covers a historicized
selection of black writers who over
the latter half of the 20th century
have inscribed in literature the cultural, social, and political experiences
of African Americans in the U.S. We
critically explore, discuss, and write
about a range of works varying from
poetry to the short story and the
novel. Our studies focus on the key
topics, issues, innovations, and
themes that have consistently been
important to African American literary production. Some examples are
the emancipated impulse, “double
consciousness,” the black struggle for
human rights, the rise of black
women writers, postmodernism, sexual and gender politics, and contemporary expressions of the slavery
motif.
Introduction to Swahili I
V11.0201 4 points.
Provides students with an elementary
understanding of Swahili, a Bantu
language with a rich oral and written
tradition that is spoken by about 100
million people from Somalia to
Mozambique and Zanzibar. After a
short presentation of Swahili’s history, codification, and relation to other
28
•
AFRICANA
STUDIES
languages, students are drilled in
phonetics and grammar. They are
also introduced to some poems,
songs, and oral narratives.
Elementary Swahili II
V11.0202 Prerequisite: V11.0201 or
professor’s approval. 4 points.
Expands on the basic knowledge of
the pronunciation, vocabulary, useful
expressions, and fundamental grammatical features acquired in Swahili I
to allow essential communication
skills to develop into conversational
ability using simple and familiar situations. Building on the early grasp
of the language, students expand the
range of conversational ability and
understanding of various grammatical concepts associated with this
agglutinative language.
Intermediate Swahili I
V11.0203 Prerequisite: V11.0202 or
professor’s approval. 4 points.
This course builds on the basic
knowledge of the pronunciation,
vocabulary, useful expressions, and
fundamental grammatical features
already attained at introduction level
to strengthen reading, writing, and
conversation skills accessing a wide
range of grammatical and literary
knowledge of the language, its cultural context, and literary genre. The
students are required to familiarize
themselves with a novel and a play
written in Kiswahili.
Intermediate Swahili II
V11.0204 Prerequisite: V11.0203 or
professor’s approval. 4 points.
The aim of this course is to enable
students to communicate entirely in
Kiswahili, to carry out bidirectional
translation from Swahili to English
and from English to Swahili, and to
negotiate technical language. At this
level, the students will have mastered
the intricacies of Kiswahili grammar,
acquired a wide range of vocabulary,
read Kiswahili fluently, and to understand Kiswahili poetry, idioms, and
proverbs and use idiomatic Kiswahili
in creative writing and translation.
Topics in Black Urban Studies
V11.0300 4 points.
Explores specific issues dealing with
the black urban experience, focusing
on social and cultural institutions.
Possible themes, which vary from
semester to semester, include class
and poverty, the police, urban development, education, sports, music,
and art.
African American Folklore
V11.0402 4 points.
Explores the traditional culture of
African Americans and its impact on
contemporary American culture.
Emphasizes the cultural roots of the
African American tradition from
West and Central Africa to that tradition’s dissemination in the United
States, the Caribbean, and parts of
Brazil. Addresses traditions such as
oral narratives, music, art, religious
belief systems, festivals, foodways,
clothing, hairstyles, and ethnic- and
gender-specific notions.
The Black Essay
V11.0403 4 points.
Examines the urban experience and
black life and culture in New York
through a series of writing assignments on African American neighborhoods, institutions, issues, and
culture. Students are required to
travel throughout the black community, conduct interviews, and do
research for essays on the black experience in the city. They are introduced to the research and reporting
techniques of journalism and given
the chance to employ these techniques in their papers.
Images of Black Privilege in
Literature and the Media
V11.0406 4 points.
Examines the images of the black
middle and upper-middle classes in
contemporary literature and the
media and explores connections
between portrayals in both forms.
Beginning with a historical overview
of media coverage of African Americans, the course explores contemporary media coverage of the expansion
and growth of the black middle class
in the post-civil rights era.
African Political Thought
V11.0411 4 points.
An introduction to the works of the
most significant African political
thinkers and statesmen of the postcolonial era. Many prominent African
nationalist leaders who came to
power in the first decade of independence were also political philosophers
imbued with a vision of the political,
economic, social, and cultural devel-
opment of their countries. These
African political thinkers are divided
into two main schools: (1) the
African nationalists; primarily concerned with internal African sociopolitical dynamics and (2) the PanAfricanists who focused on external
dynamics and constraints.
Politics of Sub-Saharan Africa
V11.0412 4 points.
An in-depth exploration of the historical, political, social, cultural, and
economic forces shaping contemporary African political processes, systems, and institutions. Different theories and approaches to the study of
African politics are examined. The
rise of African nationalism and the
struggle for independence from colonial rule is examined as well as the
first decade of independence, characterized by experiments with African
Socialism. The period of the early
’70s was characterized by recurrent
military coups and the advent of
military regimes, followed in the
mid-’70s by a surge of military
Marxist regimes. Finally the early
’90s saw the development of democracy movements in practically every
country on the continent.
International Relations of Africa
V11.0414 4 points.
An introduction to the economic,
political, and strategic dimensions of
the external relations of the 54
African states from independence to
the present. A historical overview of
international actors in Africa and of
foreign policies of the African states
provides the backdrop for the examination of Africa’s evolving economic,
political, and strategic relations with
the major world powers during and
after the cold war. The course concludes with an assessment of the status and role of Africa in the postcold war international system.
Topics in Pan-Africanism
V11.0800 4 points.
Deals with specific themes on PanAfricanism and its impact on the
modern world. Possible themes,
which vary from semester to semester, include African unity, black
rebellion, colonialism and racism,
the black diaspora and culture, and
relationships between Pan-Africanism and movements such as nationalism, Marxism, and Afrocentricity.
Language and Liberation: At
Home in the Caribbean and
Abroad
V11.0801 Identical to V61.0026.
4 points.
Explores the linguistic and cultural
transformations that took place in
the Commonwealth Caribbean from
17th-century slavery and bond-servitude to the present day. The focus is
on the extent to which Caribbean
people were given or demanded the
freedom to create and maintain a
postcolonial Caribbean identity. The
sociohistorical conditions that led to
the creation of new Caribbean languages called “pidgins” and “creoles”
as the English language was transplanted from Britain to the Third
World are discussed.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V11.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the program director. 1-4 points
per term.
RELATED COURSES
The following courses in individual
disciplines are open to Africana studies majors and minors. See the
departmental sections for course
descriptions.
Topics in Caribbean Literature
V11.0132 Identical to V29.0132 and
V41.0704.
The Street in Film and Literature
V11.0302 Identical to V29.0300.
Colonialism and the Rise of
Modern African Literature
V11.0850 Identical to V29.0850.
ECONOMICS
Economics and Society in the
Third World: Africa
V11.0125 Identical to V31.0125.
ENGLISH
18th- and 19th-Century African
American Literature
V11.0159 Identical to V41.0250.
20th-Century African American
Literature
V11.0160 Identical to V41.0251.
African American Drama
V11.0161 Identical to V41.0255 and
V30.0255.
Contemporary African American
Fiction
V11.0162 Identical to V41.0254.
FINE ARTS
ANTHROPOLOGY
Afro-Asian Dilemmas: Prospects
for Development
V11.0011 Identical to V14.0010.
African Literature
V11.0021 Identical to V14.0020.
Peoples of Sub-Saharan Africa:
Culture and International Studies
V11.0101 Identical to V14.0101.
Peoples of the Caribbean: Culture
and International Studies
V11.0102 Identical to V14.0102.
Women and Men: Anthropological Perspectives
V11.0112 Identical to V14.0112 and
V97.0112.
Ethnography and Film
V11.0122 Identical to V14.0122.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
The Postcolonial in African
Literature
V11.0128 Identical to V29.0128.
Art and Architecture in SubSaharan Africa and the South
Pacific
V11.0080 Identical to V43.0080.
HISTORY
History of African Civilization to
the 19th Century
V11.0055 Identical to V57.0055.
History of African Civilization
During the 19th and 20th
Centuries
V11.0056 Identical to V57.0056.
Ethnic Groups in American
History
V11.0627 Identical to V57.0627.
The History of Religions in
Africa
V11.0566 Identical to V57.0566.
History of Contemporary Africa
V11.0567 Identical to V57.0567.
Hull. 4 points.
AFRICANA
STUDIES
•
29
History of Southern Africa
V11.0568 Identical to V57.0568.
Seminar: Modernization and
Nation-Building in Sub-Saharan
Africa
V11.0585 Identical to V57.0585.
Seminar: History of African
Towns and Cities from Medieval
to Modern Times
V11.0598 Identical to V57.0598.
African American History to
1865
V11.0647 Identical to V57.0647.
African American History Since
1865
V11.0648 Identical to V57.0648.
Ethnic New York: From Town to
Global City
V11.0682 Identical to V57.0682.
Seminar: History of African
Americans
V11.0696 Identical to V57.0696.
JOURNALISM AND MASS
COMMUNICATION
Minorities and the Media
V11.0016 Identical to V54.0016.
LINGUISTICS
African American Vernacular
English: Language and Culture
V11.0023 Identical to V61.0023.
MUSIC
Race, Gender, and Sexuality in
U.S. History
V11.0655 Identical to V57.0655.
30
•
AFRICANA
STUDIES
African American Music in the
United States
V11.0116 Identical to V71.0016.
POLITICS
The Politics of the Caribbean
Nations
V11.0532 Identical to V53.0532.
PSYCHOLOGY
Psychology and African
Americans
V11.0702 Identical to V89.0071.
SOCIOLOGY
Race and Ethnicity
V11.0135 Identical to V93.0135.
SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
Literature of the Spanish
Caribbean
V11.0764 Identical to V95.0764.
PROGRAM IN
Ancient Studies
Minor
2 5
ADVISER:
Professor Marincola
(Classics)
WAV E R LY
P L A C E ,
N E W
Y O R K ,
N Y
1 0 0 0 3 - 6 7 9 0 .
( 2 1 2 )
9 9 8 - 8 5 9 2 .
T
he chief intent of this minor is to allow students the possibility of significant and
structured interdisciplinary work in ancient studies. The adviser for the minor (in
consultation with faculty from the student’s major department) is responsible for
ensuring that each student’s experience remains cohesive. Nonetheless, this minor adheres
to the principle of flexibility and inclusiveness. Each student will build the sort of experience that is most appropriate to his or her needs or desires. This means that the boundaries
(temporal, spatial, conceptual) will remain permeable. Each student’s course of study is
designed on an individual basis, guided by the student, the student’s adviser in his or her
own major department, and the adviser from the ancient studies minor.
A number of CAS departments and programs, as well as institutes and centers, are
directly involved in this program: Anthropology, Classics, Comparative Literature, East
Asian Studies, English, Fine Arts, Hebrew and Judaic Studies, History, Irish Studies, Linguistics, Middle Eastern Studies, and the Alexander S. Onassis Program in Hellenic Studies. The minor consists of five 4-point courses, normally to be selected from the appropriate
offerings of the departments listed above. All five of the courses selected must be offered by
departments other than the student’s major department, and not more than two may be
taken in any one department.
Students are furthermore expected to examine at least three different civilizations
or cultures in completing this minor. Language courses may not be used to fulfill the
requirements of this minor. It is also required that students who choose this minor complete, as a capstone experience, an independent study course. The adviser for the ancient
studies minor may assist students in designing a project and in finding an appropriate faculty member to direct this independent study. All programs must be approved by the
ancient studies adviser before the student begins to take courses that would fulfill the minor
requirements.
ANCIENT
STUDIES
•
31
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Anthropology (14)
2 5
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Myers
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Disotell
Faculty
WAV E R LY
P L A C E ,
Y O R K ,
N Y
1 0 0 0 3 - 6 7 9 0 .
( 2 1 2 )
9 9 8 - 8 5 5 0 .
T
he Department of Anthropology is one of the country’s leading graduate and undergraduate centers for cultural anthropology, archaeology, linguistic anthropology,
and biological anthropology—the four principal subfields of anthropology studied
in the undergraduate curriculum. The department considers its greatest assets to be the various individual areas of faculty expertise: archaeological specialties such as European, Near
Eastern, and South Asian prehistory; biological anthropology areas such as molecular primatology, primate behavior and ecology, and paleoanthropology; linguistic anthropology
foci such as discourse analysis and language socialization; and cultural anthropology specialties such as the ethnography of North America, Africa, India, the Near East, the
Caribbean, Latin America, Europe, Australia, and the South Pacific. Major theoretical
emphasis is on the systems of thought and symbolic representation of the self and society;
the relation between female and male domains of interaction; changing patterns of social
organization and hierarchy within small-scale societies, urban settings, and bureaucratic
institutions; medical anthropology; science studies; race and ethnicity; and the problem of
ethnographic representation in film and other media.
Departmental resources include an extensive film and video collection as well as
teaching and research labs for archaeology, linguistic anthropology, and biological anthropology, which can be used for research by advanced undergraduates. A regular colloquium
series and an undergraduate student association welcome undergraduate participation. Formal and informal cooperative arrangements with museums, zoos, and other academic programs in the greater New York area place at students’ disposal a group of anthropological
scholars, materials, and internship possibilities unparalleled in this country.
Charles F. Noyes Professor of
Urban Anthropology:
Lynch
David B. Kriser Professor of
Anthropology:
Ginsburg
Program
N E W
FIELDS OF INQUIRY
Cultural anthropology is the study of
social organization and the systems
of thought and values that both
reflect and inform social practice in
32
•
ANTHROPOLOGY
Professors:
Beidelman, Gilsenan, Harrison, Jolly,
Kulick, Martin, Myers, Rapp,
Schieffelin, White
Assistant Professors:
Di Fiore, Harvati, McLagan, Siu
Associate Professors:
Abercrombie, Blu, Crabtree, Davila,
Disotell, Rogers, Wright, Zito
Research Associates:
Basch, Biddle, Campana, Cantwell,
Friedlander, Herzog, Pike-Tay,
Rockefeller, Schuldenrein, Simpson,
Sutton, Volkman, Weatherford
different cultures. Cultural anthropology is interdisciplinary in orientation, analyzing and synthesizing
religious, artistic, economic, and
political practices through the com-
mon medium of culture. Traditionally cultural anthropology emphasized
the study of small-scale societies
(often termed “exotic,” indigenous,
and/or nonliterate peoples). Contem-
porary anthropology maintains such
interests but increasingly applies its
insights and methods to complex,
urban, and industrialized societies.
An emphasis of the department is
the ethnographic study of cultural,
social, and political processes that
shape our lives and those of other
people, especially as we are drawn
together and influence one another in
increasingly transnational and global
interactions.
The department participates in
the University’s Hagop Kevorkian
Center for Near Eastern Studies, the
Center for Latin American and
Caribbean Studies, the Institute of
French Studies, the Program in
Museum Studies, the Program in
Culture and Media, and the Center
for Media, Culture, and History.
Linguistic anthropology focuses
on how language is interpreted and
used in cultural contexts. Language
use is socially organized; it is a key
to understanding the ways in which
speakers create and change social
realities. Studied within historical as
well as cultural frameworks and in
relation to other social institutions
(e.g., politics, education, law, medicine), variation in ways of speaking
language(s) adds to our understanding of how social categories such as
ethnicity, race, and gender are interactionally constituted across contexts, cultures, and societies.
Anthropological archaeology is
the use of artifacts and other material
remains to understand human culture. It attempts to breathe life into
a material record that at first glance
appears static and fragmentary. The
research interests of anthropological
archaeologists range from the earliest
production of durable tools 2.5 million years ago to the refuse currently
being generated by modern cities.
All aspects of past human existence,
including art, technology, religion,
gender, economic and social organization, and food-getting strategies,
are addressed by researchers in
anthropological archaeology.
Physical anthropology encompasses the study of human biological
diversity and includes the anatomy,
genetics, behavior, ecology, and evolution of the human species and
other primates. It is linked to the
other subfields of anthropology by its
commitment to the study of human
biology and evolution within the
context of culture, society, and ecology. Close ties with the American
Museum of Natural History, the
New York University School of Medicine, and the Wildlife Conservation
Society International Programs at the
Bronx Zoo facilitate the department’s
diverse research interests in physical
anthropology.
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
Anthropology courses contribute to
undergraduate education in two
ways. First, the scope of the discipline’s interests effectively bridges
the humanities, the social sciences,
and the natural sciences. Anthropology asks basic questions concerning
the origins and development of
humans and their cultures and divergent systems of thought, belief, and
social order. By systematically analyzing various cultural traditions—
contemporary as well as historically
known—anthropology raises critical
questions concerning the bases of
both world civilizations. An understanding of the distinctive way
anthropology formulates and
attempts to answer its basic questions is a necessary component of a
comprehensive liberal education.
Second, the department offers
concentrated programs of study for
the minor, major, or honors student.
A minor usually emphasizes one of
the four subdisciplines. For the
major, the department encourages
study in all of the subdisciplines,
because each supplements and complements the others in presenting
humans as both biological and social
beings. An honors program includes
in-depth research in one aspect of
physical, archaeological, linguistic, or
cultural anthropology.
The director of undergraduate
studies works closely with minors
and majors students in designing
programs of study that integrates the
goals of individual students with the
offerings and intellectual goals of the
department and complementary
disciplines.
The department prides itself on
its graduate and undergraduate programs’ integrated nature, which
enables minors, majors, and honors
students to participate in a variety of
challenging graduate courses and
seminars. There is an active Anthropology Undergraduate Student Association (AUSA) that connects students to one another through events
and E-mail forum (listserv).
MAJOR
The major consists of 36 points,
which include V14.0001, V14.0002,
V14.0003, and V14.0017 (which is
offered only during the spring semester). The other courses may be selected from any subfield of anthropology.
Internships, however, may not be
applied toward the major, and a
grade of at least C is required in
every course to be counted toward
the major. Any course with a grade
of C- or lower will not count toward
the major. Majors should consult
regularly with the director of undergraduate studies in order to take full
advantage of the seminars and
research opportunities open to them.
Joint Major with the Department of Classics: An interdepartmental major including courses from
the Department of Anthropology
and the Department of Classics. One
anthropology course, V14.0001, is
required, along with four other
anthropology courses taken in consultation with the directors of
undergraduate studies in both
departments. Twenty (20) points are
required in Classics. See Classics (27)
for additional information. A grade
of at least C is required in every
course to be counted toward the
joint major.
Joint Major with the Department of Linguistics: The joint
major in anthropology and linguistics emphasizes the complementarity of anthropological and sociolinguistic approaches to language. Students are required to take 20 points
(five courses) each from anthropology and linguistics. A grade of at
least C is required in every course to
be counted toward a joint major.
Required courses in anthropology:
Human Society and Culture,
V14.0001; Anthropology of Language, V14.0017; Cultural Symbols, V14.0048; and two other cultural or linguistic anthropology
courses approved by anthropology’s
director of undergraduate studies.
Required courses in linguistics:
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Linguistic Perspectives, V55.0660,
or Language, V61.0001; Language
and Society, V61.0015; and at least
three additional courses chosen in
consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies in Linguistics. See Linguistics (61) for additional information.
ANTHROPOLOGY
•
33
Courses
MINOR
HONORS PROGRAM
Any four courses in the department.
The “principles” courses (Human
Society and Culture, V14.0001;
Human Evolution, V14.0002; and
Archaeology: Early Societies and Cultures, V14.0003) are recommended
as overviews of the discipline and as
prerequisites for more advanced
courses. Minors consult with the
director of undergraduate studies to
design a program that best accommodates their interests. A grade of
C- or lower will not count toward
the minor.
A degree in anthropology is awarded
with honors to selected majors who
apply for admission to the program
through the director of undergraduate studies during their sophomore
or junior year. Honors program candidates are expected to maintain an
overall grade point average of 3.5
with an average of 3.5 in the major.
Candidates for the honors program
complete 10 courses for a total of 40
points of anthropology course work.
Two honors tracks are available. The
first, typically followed by students
PRINCIPLES
ship within the discipline of anthropology. Focuses on key transformations in cultural evolution, such as
the origins of modern humans, the
emergence of food production, and
the development of complex societies, urbanism, and early states.
Explores gender roles, landscapes
and settlements, technologies, art,
cognitive systems, urbanism, and
state formation.
Human Society and Culture
V14.0001 Abercrombie, Beidelman,
Blu, Davila, Lynch, Martin, Myers,
Rapp, Rogers, Siu. 4 points.
General aims, methods, and findings
of modern cultural anthropology and
its ties with the humanities and
social sciences. Economic, political,
and family organizations and systems
of thought, including religion, are
covered with equal attention to
“primitive,” traditional, and modern
complex societies, particularly nonWestern societies.
Human Evolution
V14.0002 Laboratories. Di Fiore, Disotell, Harrison, Harvati, Jolly. 4 points.
Investigates the evolutionary origins
of humans. The study of human evolution is a multidisciplinary endeavor
involving a synthesis of concepts,
techniques, and research findings
from a variety of different scientific
fields, including evolutionary biology, paleontology, primatology, comparative anatomy, genetics, molecular
biology, geology, and archaeology.
Explores the different contributions
that scientists have made toward
understanding human origins and
provides a detailed survey of the evidence used to reconstruct the evolutionary history of our own species.
Archaeology: Early Societies and
Cultures
V14.0003 Laboratories. Crabtree,
White, Wright. 4 points.
Introduces contemporary archaeology, its theories, practices, and early
societies and cultures. Examines current methodological and theoretical
viewpoints of archaeological scholar34
•
ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropology of Language
V14.0017 Identical to V97.0017.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Open to juniors and seniors
only. Kulick, Schieffelin. 4 points.
Explores the role of language in culture and society by focusing on gender, ethnicity, social class, verbal genres, literacy, and worldview.
INTEGRATING
PERSPECTIVES
History of Anthropology
V14.0045 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Abercrombie,
Beidelman, Blu, Davila, Lynch, Martin, Myers, Rapp, Rogers, Siu. 4 points.
The discipline’s history illustrates
problems common to many aspects
of humanistic and social thought: the
philosophical problem of the “other”
or the “exotic,” as well as evolution
and the nature of human nature.
SPECIAL COURSES
Special Seminar in
Anthropology I, II
V14.0800, 0801 Open only to honors
majors and other senior majors in cultural or linguistic anthropology who have
the permission of the director of undergraduate studies. 4 points per term.
concentrating in socio-cultural or linguistic anthropology, consists of two
senior honors seminars with substantial research and writing components. The second track, typically
followed by those concentrating in
biological or archaeological anthropology, includes two research courses,
V14.0950 and V14.0951, in which a
research project is carried out, and a
special Seminar in Anthropology
(V14.0800 or V14.0801) or a graduate course. All of these courses count
toward the major.
Honors Research I, II
V14.0950-0951 Open only to honors
majors who have the permission of the
director of undergraduate studies and the
instructor. May be taken in either order.
4 points per term.
Internship
V14.0980, 0981 Open only to majors
and outstanding students who have the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies and the instructor, who will
act as supervisor. 2-4 points per term.
Opportunities for students to gain
practical work experience sponsored
by selected institutions, agencies,
and research laboratories are negotiated with the internship sponsor, a
departmental supervisor, and the student. Requirements may vary but
include 8-12 hours of fieldwork per
week, regular meetings with the
departmental supervisor, and assignments relevant to the internship
experience. Student initiation of
internship placement is encouraged.
Independent Study
V14.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the instructor and the director of
undergraduate studies. 2 or 4 points per
term; 6 or 8 points in exceptional cases.
CULTURAL AND LINGUISTIC
ANTHROPOLOGY
Anthropology and Classical
Studies
V14.0016 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Beidelman.
4 points.
Examines the ways in which anthropology has been employed by classical scholars to understand the society,
beliefs, literature, and arts of ancient
Greece. Reviews relevant works by
anthropologists, sociologists, historians, philosophers, and literary critics,
indicating both the advantages and
the dangers of interdisciplinary
research.
Slavery in Anthropological
Perspective: Africa and the
Ancient World
V14.0018 Identical to V11.0018.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Beidelman. 4 points.
Survey of basic anthropological and
sociological issues posed by the institution of slavery in Africa and
ancient Greece and Rome, including
problems of the change from simpler
to more complex societies and
economies; definitions of person,
gender, race, work, and ethnicity;
and the relations of ideology and cultural boundaries.
African Literature
V14.0020 Identical to V11.0021.
Prerequisite: V14.0001. Beidelman.
4 points.
Compares traditional oral literature
and the writings of the colonial and
postcolonial periods. Discussion of
problems of translation, cultural relativity, and the search for identity as
revealed through novels, poetry, and
theatre.
Religion and World View
V14.0030 Prerequisite: V14.0001.
Abercrombie, Beidelman, Lynch, Myers,
Zito. 4 points.
Examines the cultural nature of basic
beliefs and values manifested in both
simple and complex societies. Discussion of time and space, causality,
myth, prophecy and divination,
witchcraft and magic, and mysticism.
Witchcraft: An Anthropological
Approach
V14.0031 Prerequisite: V14.0001.
Beidelman. 4 points.
Examines witchcraft through interdisciplinary study, including how
theories of causation and reality are
modified by culture and society and
the way that social theorists have
judged witchcraft in relation to
social stability, conflict, and change.
Considers both nonliterate, nonWestern examples and cases from
Europe and New England where historians have made extensive use of
anthropological techniques.
Conversation in Everyday Life
V14.0032 Prerequisite: V14.0001.
Schieffelin. 4 points.
Investigates the role conversation
plays in the lives of those living in
culturally and linguistically diverse
urban communities, with particular
focus on speech in medical, work,
and school settings, where miscommunication frequently occurs.
Salvation and Revolution
V14.0034 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
one other social science course. Beidelman,
Blu, Myers. 4 points.
Examines revolutionary movements
in both traditional and industrial
societies in terms of how violence,
coercion, prophecy, and radical
thought impel social change. Analyzes utopian communities, prophetic movements, cargo cults, religious
sects, and terrorism from various
social scientific perspectives.
Medical Anthropology
V14.0035 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Martin,
Rapp. 4 points.
Analysis of medical beliefs and practices in African, Asian, and Latin
American societies. Studies the coexistence of different kinds of medical
specialists (e.g., shamans, herbalists,
bonesetters, midwives, physicians
trained in indigenous and cosmopolitan medicine), with particular reference to the structures of health
resources available to laymen and
problems of improving health care.
Japanese Business, Society, and
Culture
V14.0039 Prerequisite: V14.0001.
Beidelman. 4 points.
Raises questions of whether modern
business organizations are determined and succeed because of cultural factors or are governed by more
universal criteria. Compares American and European businesses with
those in Japan. Particular attention
to the current debate regarding the
popularly perceived success of Japanese business and management. Cultural influence on education, motivation, cooperation, and competition in
both social and historical perspectives.
Family and Kinship
V14.0041 Identical to V97.0041.
Prerequisite: V14.0001. Abercrombie,
Beidelman, Blu, Lynch, Myers, Rapp,
Rogers. 4 points.
Examines beliefs and practices
involving the family, marriage, and
sexuality and how these relate to
varying systems of dominance and
control. Discusses different cultural
views of biology. Although primary
emphasis is on non-Western cultures,
comparisons are developed with
Western ones.
Urban Society
V14.0044 Prerequisite: V14.0001
or permission of the instructor. Lynch.
4 points.
Analyzes popular and theoretical
misconceptions about cities and city
life, including crowding and aggression, myths of urban planning, and
the determinism of space and numbers. African, Asian, and Middle
Eastern cities, both ancient and modern, throw light on the nature of
cities and the problems of understanding them in the modern world.
Fieldwork on a problem in New
York City.
Anthropology of Education
V14.0046 Prerequisite: V14.0001
or permission of the instructor. Blu.
4 points.
Ideas of education and their ties to
varying cultural concepts of class and
community. Assesses the relations
between intellectual “fields,” political domination, valued knowledge,
and inequality in traditional and
modern, complex societies.
Cultural Symbols
V14.0048 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of instructor. Abercrombie,
Beidelman, Ginsburg, Myers. 4 points.
Surveys the various symbolic systems
employed by the world’s people,
considering their use in myth, ritual,
literature, and art and the kinds of
anthropological theories applied to
explain their power and forms.
Approaches theory through case
studies, providing a diverse view of
world cultures. Uses materials from
all continents; emphasizes non-Western, nonliterate societies though
some material from the West is also
used.
ANTHROPOLOGY
•
35
Mythology and Anthropology
V14.0049 Prerequisite: V14.0001.
4 points.
An overview of the major theories of
myth, emphasizing their impact on
anthropological understandings of
forms of “sacred narrative.” Theoretically informed readings are combined
with a series of brief textual readings,
presented in “facing-page” bilingual
form, providing students with the
texts of actual myths in as minimally
“edited” a form as possible. The idea
is to explore ways the study of myth
has informed anthropology, while
retaining an “ethnographic” focus on
myths, as performances.
Peoples of Sub-Saharan Africa:
Culture and International Studies
V14.0101 Identical to V11.0101.
Prerequisite: V14.0001. Beidelman.
4 points.
Surveys the societies and cultures of
Africa. Divided between accounts of
traditional ways of life, the history of
colonial contact with Europe, and
consideration of life in contemporary
African states. Involves anthropological studies as well as historical works,
novels, and autobiographies, many
by African authors. African material
is related to broader issues of social
theory, ethnicity, social change, and
the ties between culture, society, and
values.
Peoples of the Caribbean: Culture
and International Studies
V14.0102 Identical to V11.0106.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. 4 points.
Provides a unifying anthropological
perspective for comparing Hispanic
and Afro-Creole Caribbean societies,
reviewing how Caribbean colonial
experiences have structured differences in the race, class, and
ethnic/national identities of the peoples living in these two Caribbean
traditions. Examines how this resulted in different cultural forms and
ideological orientations as the cultural legacies of the various peoples of
the Caribbean underwent processes of
creolization. Addresses issues of identity and empowerment in relation to
Caribbean diaspora, tourism, and
efforts to develop Pan-Caribbean
institutions and a Pan-Caribbean
consciousness.
36
•
ANTHROPOLOGY
Peoples of Latin America: Culture
and International Studies
V14.0103 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Abercrombie,
Siu. 4 points.
Surveys Latin American societies and
cultures, placing special emphasis on
class, ethnicity, and nationhood.
Examines some of the fundamental
characteristics of Ibero-American civilization both in its historical development and in its transformations
across a variety of regional and class
contexts. Discusses the complex
interrelationships between country
and city and between “popular” and
“elite” culture by examining ethnographic case material and a few general interpretative works.
Peoples of India: Culture and
International Studies
V14.0104 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Lynch.
4 points.
Aims to change the distorted image
of India to a more realistic picture.
Examines the main ideas that make
India one of the world’s enduring
civilizations. Contrasts India’s contributions to civilization and the West
with the impact of Islam, colonialism, and the West on India. Topics
include caste and untouchability, village and city, gurus and modern
sects, bhakti, parliamentary democracy and population, and Indians in the
United States.
Peoples of Southeast Asia: Culture and International Studies
V14.0105 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Blu. 4 points.
Southeast Asia has figured prominently in the concerns of Americans
and Europeans from the trade in the
Spice Islands (now Indonesia) to the
war in Vietnam and the economic
success of the Pacific Rim. Introduction to the richness of civilizations
and peoples from Burma through
Malaysia and Indonesia to the Philippines. Interdisciplinary approach
integrating the ideas of anthropologists, historians, political scientists,
economists, linguists, and musicologists concerned with the area.
Peoples of Europe: Culture and
International Studies
V14.0111. Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Abercrombie,
Rogers. 4 points.
Explores cultural systems and social
structures in modern European soci-
eties. Provides an introduction to the
insights to be gained from an anthropological perspective on Western
complex societies. Uses ethnographic
literature on Western and Mediterranean Europe to examine issues such
as ethnic and national identity, social
dimensions of economic change, gender and family organization, and ritual and religious behavior.
Women and Men:
Anthropological Perspectives
V14.0112 Identical to V11.0112 and
V97.0112. Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. Abercrombie,
Beidelman, Ginsburg, Kulick, Martin,
Rapp, Siu. 4 points.
A comparison of women’s and men’s
experiences, activities, resources,
powers, and symbolic significance as
they vary within and between societies. Social and historical approaches
in the analysis of how gender relations are affected by major social
transformations. Emphasis on such
changes as gender roles, current
transnational migrations, social
movements, international relations,
and the role of the military in a variety of world societies.
Transcultural Cinema
V14.0122 Formerly Ethnography and
Film. Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of the instructor. McLagan. 4 points.
Explores the impact of forms anthropologists use on our understanding
of other cultures. Focuses on the use
of film and its relationship to theory,
method, and substance of anthropology. Moving images and text from a
wide range of geographic areas are
compared to evaluate their differences as modes of ethnographic
description. Discusses challenges to
dominant text of the 1980s and the
emergence of new social/cultural subjects represented in the 1990s,
including innovations in genres.
Issues in Social and Cultural
Anthropology I, II
V14.0320, 0321 Prerequisite:
V14.0001 or permission of the instructor.
4 points per term.
This seminar analyzes and assesses
selected key current issues in the discipline theoretically, politically, and
epistemologically. See the department’s current internal catalog.
Anthropological Perspectives on
Race and Identity
V14.0323 Identical to V11.0323.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Siu. 4 points.
Examines the formation and deployment of the category “race” in historical and cross-cultural perspective.
Investigates how racisms operate
within wider systems of complementary exclusions tied to gender, class,
national, and imperial identities.
Addresses topics such as race in the
construction of colonial and postcolonial hierarchies and ideologies; the
production of “whiteness” in U.S.
cultural politics; global (re)articulations of race-cum-ethnocultural identities; and the environmental justice
movement as a contemporary terrain
of struggle in the elaboration of politics of difference.
Reimagining Community: Race,
Nation, and the Politics of
Belonging
V14.0325 Identical to V15.0200.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Siu. 4 points.
Critically examine and evaluate the
various approaches to studying and
interpreting different community formations. Examine different notions of
“community” through a variety of
disciplinary lenses. Readings are
drawn from anthropology, history,
feminist studies, cultural studies, ethnic studies, and philosophy. Students
are encouraged to examine these texts
both as theoretical representations of
“community” as well as historically
embedded artifacts that are part of
the larger machinery in the production of knowledge.
Human Rights and Anthropology
V14.0326 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. McLagan.
4 points.
An anthropological perspective on
the globalization of human rights in
the post-cold war era. Commitment
to “local culture” has sometimes
positioned anthropologists in critical
opposition to universal values and
transnational processes such as
human rights. Explores this legacy
and consider the ways in which
human rights are constituted as a
field of action and how it is structured by transnational discourses and
practices. Course has an important
media Internet/Web component.
Body, Gender, and Belief in
China
V14.0350 Identical to V90.0350.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Zito. 4 points.
Provides an extended and historical
exploration of categories basic to
social life such as gender, body, and
family. Examine the images of family
and positions of women in the classics; factor in ritualist and Taoist
notions of body; and discuss changes
in the practices of filiality over time.
Analyses of secondary monographs
are combined with work in primary
sources.
Belief and Social Life in China
V14.0351 Identical to V90.0351.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or permission of
the instructor. Zito. 4 points.
The Chinese word for “religion”
means “teaching.” This course
explores what Chinese people
“taught” themselves about the person, society, and the natural world
and thus how social life was constructed and maintained. Examines
in historical perspective the classic
texts of the Taoist and Confucian
canon and their synthesis; Buddhist,
especially Ch’an (Zen). Discusses the
practices of filiality in Buddhism,
Confucian orthodoxy, and in folk
religion.
Transnationalism and
Anthropology
V14.0400 Prerequisite: V14.0001 or
permission of the instructor. McLagan,
Siu. 4 points.
Examines what is considered “new”
in ongoing reconstruction of world
order and its accompanying disorder.
Also examines how this changes the
ways people earn their livelihoods;
how cultures are transmitted and
hybridized; how migrating populations maintain connections to their
homelands; how group identities are
constructed and asserted; and how
social movements around newly
politicized issues arise. Discusses
changing roles of nation-states and
the growing significance of transnational, diasporic, and globalized
social relations and cultural forms.
ARCHAEOLOGY
Prehistoric Hunters and
Gatherers
V14.0210 Prerequisite: V14.0003 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree.
4 points.
An examination of the origin and
early development of culture in the
Old and New Worlds. Utilizes
archaeological materials from the
Paleolithic and Mesolithic period of
Africa, Eurasia, and the Paleo-Indian,
Woodland, and Archaic periods of
North America, against a background of related evidence from
physical anthropology and ethnology.
Rise and Fall of Civilization
V14.0211 Prerequisite: V14.0003 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree,
Wright. 4 points.
Considers two distinct processes: (1)
the origins of food production and
consequent development of domesticated plants and animals and (2) the
trend toward increasing social, political, and economic complexity that
culminates in early states. Several
independent examples of each
process from both the Old and New
Worlds. Special attention to the various theories that have been advanced
to account for such developments.
Prehistoric Art
V14.0212 Prerequisite: V14.0001,
V14.0003, or permission of the instructor. White. 4 points.
Examines prehistoric art forms, their
interpretation, and their evolutionary
and behavioral significance. Students
are introduced to Stone Age art, its
form, contents, and chronological
evolution. Also employs more recent
prehistoric case studies. Reviews and
assesses competing interpretive
frameworks, with emphasis on
understanding the social and ideological context within which the art
was produced and comprehended.
Problems in Anthropological
Archaeology I, II
V14.0213, 0214 Prerequisite:
V14.0003. Open only to majors in
anthropology who have the permission of
the director of undergraduate studies and
the instructor. Crabtree, White, Wright.
4 points per term.
Designed for majors in anthropology
to work with individual faculty
members in order to explore specific
issues in archaeological theory and
research.
ANTHROPOLOGY
•
37
Archaeological Theory and
Technique
V14.0215 Prerequisite; V14.0003 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree,
White, Wright. 4 points.
Considers both current and past theoretical developments in archaeology,
with special attention to the role of
innovations in analytical technique as
they relate to these developments.
Theoretical approaches to the economy, technology, and organization of
hunter-gatherers; early agriculturalists; gender differences; and complex
societies. Examines research design,
sampling problems, chronometric
methods, analysis of paleoenvironments, and typology in terms of
modern understanding as well as historical perspective.
Surveys of Regional Prehistory
V14.0216 Prerequisite: V14.0003 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree,
White, Wright. 4 points.
Prehistories of selected culture areas.
Emphasis on the theoretical and
methodological foundations of
archaeology within a culture area as
reconstructed through archaeological
methods. The choice of region varies
with the interests of individual
instructors. Regions include cultures
in the Near East, Egypt, South Asia,
Europe, and the New Worlds.
Later Prehistoric Europe: From
the End of the Ice Age to the
Coming of the Romans
V14.0217 Prerequisite: V14.0003 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree.
4 points.
Between the end of the Ice Age and
the expansion of the Roman Empire,
temperate Europe witnessed a series
of social and economic transformations that represented a transition
from a hunting and gathering way of
life to urban chiefdoms. Along the
way, these hunter-gatherers became
agriculturalists and stockherders,
learned to use metals, and developed
social structures as complex as any
found in Old World civilizations.
Examines changes in later prehistoric
Europe from about 8000 B.C. to the
arrival of the Romans.
Fieldwork in Archaeology
V14.0830 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. Summer only. Crabtree,
White, Wright. 4 points.
Students live and work at the selected prehistoric or historic site, usually
in eastern or midwestern North
38
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ANTHROPOLOGY
America. Students are instructed in
field technique and laboratory procedures. Further background provided
through staff and guest lectures.
BIOLOGICAL
ANTHROPOLOGY
Fossil Evidence for Human
Evolution
V14.0050 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Harrison,
Harvati, Jolly. 4 points.
Analysis of fossil evidence for human
evolution and the paleoanthropological inferences derived from such evidence. Emphasis on methods of phylogenetic reconstruction, taxonomy,
functional anatomy, and paleoecology.
Human Variation
V14.0051 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Disotell,
Harvati. 4 points.
Humans are the most wide-ranging
of all of the species on earth. Our
evolutionary history and our ability
to adapt to such a broad range of
environments is dependent on the
results in the patterns of human variability we see today. New techniques
have been developed that allow us to
explore the different levels of human
variation. This course focuses on new
data and methodologies, including
molecular genetic techniques, and
the hypotheses and controversies generated by these new perspectives.
Evolution and Biology of Human
Behavior
V14.0052 Prerequisite: V14.0002.
Harrison, Harvati, Jolly. 4 points.
Introductory survey presenting a synthetic approach to the biological,
behavioral, and cultural origins of
humans. Explores data and theories
from paleoanthropology, archaeology,
nonhuman primate behavioral studies, brain research, and sociobiology
for their contributions to the study of
human behavior.
Human Genetics
V14.0053 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Di Fiore,
Disotell, Jolly. 4 points.
In-depth analysis of the genetic component of human variability. Discusses mechanisms of inheritance, gene
expression in individuals and populations, and alternative explanations for
genetic variability. Explores the
implications of modern advances in
genetics, such as genetic engineering
and gene therapy.
Primate Behavior and Ecology
V14.0054 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Di Fiore,
Jolly. 4 points.
Differences between the African apes
lie in the relationship between each
species and its ecological setting in its
strategy for “making a living” in the
tropical rain forest. Tropical forests,
woodlands, and grasslands are among
the most complex of the world’s
ecosystems and are the homes of most
primate species. Course uses primates
as test cases for some of the general
ecological laws that have been proposed by theoretical biologists and as
a key to understanding aspects of
tropical ecology and conservation.
Health and Disease in Human
Evolution
V14.0055 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Disotell,
Harvati. 4 points.
Examines human health and disease
within an ecological framework,
exploring the interactions of environmental, genetic, physiological, and
cultural factors in the expression and
distribution of human diseases. Develops pathology profiles for nonhuman
primates; prehistoric human populations; and hunting and gathering,
agricultural, and industrial groups,
with emphasis on the expression of
infectious disease in human history
and newly (re-)emerging diseases.
Biology of the Living Primates
V14.0056 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Harrison,
Jolly. 4 points.
Surveys the functional anatomy of the
living primates, including variation
in external features, locomotor anatomy, dental and dietary specializations,
sensory and nervous systems, and
reproductive anatomy. Uses laboratory exercises to emphasize the identification and functional interpretation of
skeletal material in both human and
nonhuman primates.
Molecular Evolution of Primates
V14.0058 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Di Fiore,
Disotell. 4 points.
Focuses on different aspects of molecular evolution, particularly as they
apply to the study of primate phylogeny. The data collected through
the recent growth of DNA mapping
and sequencing technologies are
explored and compared to more traditional morphological and protein
data used to reconstruct primate history. Emphasis is placed on reviewing the advantages and limitations of
different techniques of data collection and analysis.
Primate Communication
V14.0059 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Di Fiore.
4 points.
Examines how primates communicate and why their communication
takes the forms it does. Discusses
general issues associated with the
study of animal communication:
potential functions of communication, different modalities by which
communicative signals can be transmitted, types of information that can
be conveyed via each of these modalities, and ways in which researchers
go about studying animal communication systems. Examines ways environmental and sociological factors
influence the evolution of forms of
communication.
Human Ecology
V14.0090 Prerequisite: V14.0002 or
permission of the instructor. Crabtree, Di
Fiore. 4 points.
This course seeks to assess the degree
to which variations in human biology and culture can be understood as
adaptations to varying external conditions. We examine the relationship
of human systems of action and the
natural world in order to understand
the various forms of human adaptation. Case studies of several living
peoples, contemporary and past biological communities, and prehistoric
cultures provide the material for
interpretation and evaluation of theoretical positions.
Current Topics in Physical
Anthropology
V14.0511, 0512 Only open to majors
in anthropology who have the permission
of the departmental adviser or the instructor. 4 points per term.
Designed for majors in anthropology
to work with individual faculty
members and to intensively explore
problems of theory and research in
physical anthropology.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Qualified anthropology majors may
take graduate courses with permission of the director of undergraduate
studies in consultation with the
instructor. Consult the current Graduate School of Arts and Science Bulletin.
ANTHROPOLOGY
•
39
PROGRAM IN
Asian/Pacific/American
Studies (15)
Minor
2 6 9 M E R C E R S T R E E T, S U I T E 6 0 9 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 7 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 3 7 0 0 .
DIRECTOR OF THE
PROGRAM:
Associate Professor Tchen
Faculty
Program
T
he Asian/Pacific/American Studies Program provides an interdisciplinary approach
to understanding the history and contemporary experiences of Asian/Pacific Americans in the Americas. The category of Asian/Pacific American includes people of
East Asia, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands living in the United States as
well as in other parts of the Americas. This program takes a critical community studies
approach that uses field research as the central methodology to examine the relationship
between theory and practice and between structure and agency, in the study of A/P/A communities. Students develop important analytical skills that will help them negotiate today’s
multiracial, multiethnic environment, as well as gain a level of cross-cultural awareness and
skills that will be useful to them in any field of study they choose to enter.
The two main areas of concentration for this program are urban studies and diaspora studies. Urban studies examines the formation of A/P/A communities in relation to the
various cultural, social, and political institutions in urban settings, with special emphasis
on the New York metropolitan area. Diaspora studies investigates the processes that enable
A/P/A communities in the United States to sustain ties with communities throughout the
world. To study these two areas of concentration, the program insists on an interdisciplinary
approach that takes into consideration analyses of cultural production—social, political, and
economical processes—as well as cross-cultural conflict and collaboration.
In coordination with the program, the A/P/A Studies Institute brings renowned
artists, scholars, writers, and activists to campus. This provides the opportunity for discussion, performance, and reflection with students, faculty, and community members.
Associate Professor:
Tchen
Assistant Professors:
Sandhu, Siu
Adjunct Faculty:
Gamalinda, Javier, Machida,
Mukherjea, OuYang, San Agustin
The A/P/A Studies Program is in the
process of hiring faculty and developing the major curricula.
In addition to full-time faculty,
the program also draws on the
wealth of expertise of teachers and
practitioners in New York City for
adjunct faculty. Visiting faculty from
outside the city also add to a rich
mix of perspectives and experience.
MINOR
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Five courses in A/P/A Studies,
including V15.0010; V15.0101; and
three electives from the A/P/A Studies course offerings, at least one of
which must be a seminar or “community projects” course. Please contact the program for updated course
requirements and course descriptions.
The internship program complements and enhances the formal
course work of the Asian/Pacific/
American Studies Program. Students
intern at various Asian/Pacific American organizations throughout the
tristate metropolitan region. Internships are a highly recommended, but
40
•
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
Courses
not required, component of the
A/P/A Studies major sequence. Nonmajors may also apply for internships
through the A/P/A Studies Program.
Asian/Pacific/American Community
Studies: Theories and Practices is the
prerequisite to an Internship/Independent Study.
The goals of the internship are as
follows: (1) to develop sound critical
thinking and communication skills;
(2) to allow students to apply the
theory they have gained through
their course work; (3) to master theory and practice of collaboration in
different communities; (4) to provide
students with the analytical tools to
examine the experiences of Asian/
Pacific Americans; (5) to assist students in exploring professional career
paths; and (6) to become adept at
working with populations whose
background might be different from
the students.
CORE COURSES
studies and planning, anthropology,
sociology, humanities, media, and
cultural arts.
Note: Students cannot enroll in
the Metropolitan Studies internship
in the same semester.
The course explores the ways in
which the writers treat issues such as
racial/ethnic identity; immigration
and assimilation; gender; class; sexuality; nationalism; culture and community; history and memory; and art
and political engagement.
Introduction to Asian/Pacific/
American Experience
V15.0010 Identical to V57.0626.
Tchen. 4 points.
This interdisciplinary course provides a general introduction to the
themes of Asian/Pacific/American
studies through class discussions,
guest speakers, and visits to community organizations in addition to traditional class methods. Emphasizing
historical perspectives, it explores
concepts of “home” and “community,”
as well as “Asian” and “American” in
Asian/Pacific/American experiences
in the United States and elsewhere.
Issues covered include Asian diasporas and Asian migration to the United States, colonialism, orientalism,
labor and work, family and community formation, U.S. law, and international relations and Asian Americans; also introduced are analyses of
social constructions of gender, sexuality, and race. The course covers
contemporary issues such as identity;
education; the media; and the politics of representation, cultural production and pop culture, activism,
panethnicity, and electoral politics.
Asian/Pacific/American
Community Studies: Theories
and Practices
V15.0101 Prerequisite: V15.0010.
Siu. 4 points.
This course investigates through
class discussions and fieldwork, definitions of Asian/Pacific American
communities based not just on ethnicity and geography, but also gender, class, sexual orientation, religion, and other significant affiliations and identifications. Introduces
the theories and practices of Asian
American “community studies”
through an interdisciplinary framework that evaluates and draws upon
a variety of approaches from urban
INTRODUCTORY-LEVEL
COURSES
History of Asians in the United
States
V15.0030 Identical to V57.0046.
4 points.
A general overview of Asian American history, beginning in the mid19th century and proceeding to the
present. The course explores the
experience of a wide range of groups
that fall under the term “Asian
American,” noting not only the facts
and figures of this group’s presence
in the United States but also their
experiences, the dynamic of cultures,
and their contributions to American
history. The incorporation of various
academic approaches, such as film
and fiction, provides an interdisciplinary means to illuminating this history and topic of study.
Asian American Literature
V15.0301 Identical to V41.0716 and
V29.0301. 4 points.
This overview begins with the recovery of early writings during the
1960s-1970s and proceeds to the
subsequent production of Asian
American writing and literary/cultural criticism up to the present. The
course focuses on significant factors
affecting the formation of Asian
American literature and criticism,
such as changing demographics of
Asian American communities and
the influence of ethnic, women’s, and
gay/lesbian/bisexual studies. Included in the course is a variety of genres
(poetry, plays, fiction and nonfiction,
literary/cultural criticism) by writers
from diverse ethnic backgrounds.
Asian American Women
V15.0302 Identical to V97.0996.
4 points.
Begins with a historical overview
and then opens into a survey of current issues facing Asian American
women. Areas include immigration
history; popular cultural representations of Asian American women;
U.S. militarized prostitution in Asia;
the mail-order bride industry; sex
tourism; anti-Asian violence and violence against women; domestic violence; patriarchy and capitalism in
relation to work and global labor
migration; sexuality; the current
anti-immigrant climate and legislation; U.S. and Third World feminist
theories; cultural production; and
the history of Asian American
women’s organized resistance.
Asian/Pacific/American Media
and Culture
V15.0305 Identical to H72.0488.
4 points.
Who are Asian/Pacific Americans as
cultural producers today? How do
we imagine ourselves? What are
some of these images? This course
discusses Asian/Pacific/American
experiences such as migration,
assimilation, displacement, generational and class differences, multiculturalism, and racism within our
respective communities as well as
across communities. In this survey
seminar, participants have the opportunity to explore the diversity of
Asian/Pacific/American cultures
through a wide range of film and
video screenings, critical and fictional writings, and guest artists. The
course examines mainstream stereo-
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
•
41
typical representations of Asian/
Pacific Americans and their experiences. The majority of the semester is
spent looking at these representations in relationship to more complex narratives produced by cuttingedge Asian/Pacific Americans whose
works address issues of class, race,
gender, national, and sexual identities through independent and alternative cinematic and literary lenses.
Asian American Art and Social
Issues
V15.0313 4 points.
Examines how Asian American visual
artists of different ethnic and generational backgrounds, ranging from
recent immigrants and refugees to
the American-born, articulate questions of self and community identification through the visual arts. Using
slides, artists’ videos, and film,
themes central to the historical
impact of European orientalism, the
experience of traversing cultures, situating oneself in America, speaking
to and of Asia, speaking to and of
East-West interaction, intergenerational connections, gender roles, and
Asian cultural stereotypes are
explored. The course asks how “ethnic-specific” work is framed and presented through contemporary exhibitions and curatorial and critical practices. Visits to pertinent art exhibitions and public programs may be
arranged.
Cinema of Asia America: Moving
(the) Image
V15.0314 Identical to V33.8314 and
H72.0315. 4 points.
The image of the Asian has, at various points in the 20th century,
served several purposes in the national imagination of “white” American
Hollywood, from the silent era
through the recent spate of politically correct Vietnam movies; in the Joy
Luck clubs, Ninja Turtles, and
Japanimation; or even in the interface between Hong Kong action
movies and Hollywood. This course
looks critically at this history fraught
with discrimination and misrepresentation, but at the same time one that
also documents stories of dogged
resistance and gradually rising presence. “Other” encounters of different
kinds between Asia and the West—
namely, the colonial and neocolonial,
along with brief examinations of
42
•
some proto-Hollywood movie industries in Asia—also serve as reference
points.
Race, Immigration, and Cities
V15.0322 Identical to V93.0453 and
V99.0347. 4 points.
Introduces the themes and debates in
the sociological and urban studies literature on the multiple ways that
post-1965 immigration is transforming urban demography, cultural and
political institutions, and local
economies. The experiences of immigrants from Asia, Latin America, and
the Caribbean in historic “gateway”
cities such as New York, Miami, and
Los Angeles are posing important
challenges to traditional models or
paradigms of immigrant assimilation
and mobility within restructuring
urban economies. Based on census
data, computer mapping analysis,
and ethnographic fieldwork, students
prepare a comprehensive sociodemographic profile and examine issues
of employment, ethnic economies,
housing and enclave neighborhoods,
community development, political
participation, education, race/ethnic
relations, and leadership development.
Filipino American, U.S. Colonialism, and Transnationalism in the
Philippine Diaspora
V15.0323 4 points.
Examines how Filipino global dispersal after U.S. colonial rule (19021941) ambiguously culminated in
the Philippines’ “Commonwealth”
status in the 1930s and after the
postindependence period. This course
explores how the colonial formation
of the “Filipino American” portended
the postcolonial emergence of the
“overseas contract worker” (OCW)
and how the OCW reciprocally
points up the Filipino American as a
complex figure of colonial and
transnational histories.
History of the South Asian
Diaspora
V15.0326 Identical to V57.0326.
4 points.
Introduction to the history of the
South Asian diaspora in the United
States, highlighting work on South
Asian immigrant communities in the
United States and the little known
history of South Asian immigrants
on the East Coast, in the context of
historical migration to the United
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
States, Canada, and the Caribbean.
The course offers a multidisciplinary
perspective and uses classic, as well
as new works, on South Asians in the
United States from history, anthropology, sociology, and cultural studies.
ADVANCED-LEVEL COURSES
Documenting Asian/Pacific
America: Creating Presence
V15.0080 4 points.
How have Asian/Pacific American
cultural producers negotiated community inclusive of class, gender,
ethnicity, sexual, generational, cultural, and historical differences?
What kinds of day-to-day issues does
one face in any given community?
This course examines how Asian/
Pacific American film and videomakers have represented concepts of community and how grass roots media
production can be used to explore
social, cultural, and political issues
and concerns in relation to Asian/
Pacific/American communities.
Course participants can create presence through their own audiovisual
projects.
Filming Asian America:
Documenting Community
V15.0090 Identical to V99.0352 and
H72.0450. 4 points.
Focuses specifically on the Asian
American communities of New York
and their histories. Presents filmmaking as a mode of community
documentation and filmmakers as
historians. Students meet as theorists
and field researchers. The first phase
is largely historical and theoretical,
while the latter mainly deals with
hands-on filmmaking. Students document various aspects of Asian/Pacific/
American communities in New
York—sociocultural and political
issues surrounding them, histories,
personal stories, geodynamics of ethnic localities, domestic lives, professions, ethnic festivals and performances, etc. At the end of the course,
the students would have made at
least two collective documentaries
(10 to 12 minutes each). The documentaries may be interrelated or on
entirely different subjects.
Reimagining Community: Race,
Nation, and the Politics of
Belonging
V15.0200 Identical to V14.0325 and
V99.0341. 4 points.
Critically examines and evaluates the
various approaches to studying and
interpreting different community
formations. Examines different
notions of “community” through a
variety of disciplinary lenses. Readings are drawn from anthropology,
history, feminist studies, cultural
studies, ethnic studies, and philosophy. The course also examines these
texts both as theoretical representations of “community” as well as historically embedded artifacts that are
part of the larger machinery in the
production of knowledge.
Asians in the Global Economy:
United States and International
Perspectives
V15.0303 4 points.
Examines the causes, patterns, and
outcomes of the post-World War II
recomposition of urban populations
that have been facilitated by an
increased and diversified international
flow of people and global economic
restructuring. Macroeconomic trends
form the theoretical framework in
which we investigate the experiences
and multiple ways that Asians and
Asian Americans participate in the
emergence of the overlapping new
“world order,” “postindustrial” U.S.
economy, and global production in
the Pacific Rim and Third World
countries. This course also reviews
models of international migration
and examines the causes and qualities
of the bifurcated nature of Asian
immigration to the U.S. characterized by “brain drain” and Golden
Venture immigrants.
Multiethnic New York: A Study
of an Asian/Latino Neighborhood
V15.0310 Identical to V99.0349.
4 points.
The growth of the Asian and Latino
populations is driving the transformation of the economic, social, and
political landscape of New York City.
One notable pattern in social geography of multiethnic New York is the
emergence of concentrated Asian/
Latino neighborhoods. This course
focuses on one such neighborhood
and uses quantitative methods and
fieldwork to conduct a comprehensive community study. The objective
is to examine the reproduction of
socioeconomic inequality in “global
cities” and identify viable strategies
for community-based economic
development in multiethnic immigrant communities.
Asian and Asian American
Contemporary Art
V15.0319 Identical to V43.0319 and
V33.0319. 4 points.
Exposes students to wide-ranging
issues of contemporary Asian and
Asian American identities in the
visual arts, emphasizing the need for
greater transcultural awareness and
understanding in the fluid environment of the post-cold war world,
where people, ideas, and images
swiftly traverse ever more porous
national boundaries. It examines how
Asian artists of different ethnic and
generational backgrounds articulate
questions of self, community, cultural, and national identification
through the visual arts. Themes
related to conceptions of Asian
modernity and the legacy of interaction between Asia and the West, as
well as the experience of traversing
cultures and situating oneself in
America, are explored.
Asian Americans and War
V15.0321 Identical to V57.0654 and
V33.0321. 4 points.
Examines Asian American history
and contemporary culture using the
theme of “war” as an organizing
principle. It considers not only the
sociopolitical effects of actual war—
between Asian nations, between the
United States and Asian nations, and
civil wars in Asia—on immigration
to the United States but also the
myriad meanings of war and their
social and cultural implications for
Asian Americans. It examines the
ways in which wars have transformed
Asian American social organization
and influenced shifting alliances,
multiple sense of belonging, and
racial representations in the United
States during World War II and
Vietnam as well as the metaphorical
presence of war in everyday life.
Race, Class, and Metropolitan
Transformation
V15.0601 Identical to V57.0656 and
V99.0345. 4 points.
Metropolitan growth in the 20th
century has been marked by persistent class division and racial conflict.
This course engages in a historical
examination of the (re)production of
ideologies and relationships of race
and class within the process of 20thcentury U.S. metropolitan development. Reading and discussion are
organized around social, economic,
and cultural transformations in the
United States; we review the literature on urbanization and residential
segregation in order to examine the
framing of historical questions as
well as current scholarship on theories
of space, consumption, class, and race
to explore their usefulness in the
explanation of difference and inequality in 20th-century U.S. metropolitan spatialization.
Reading Race and Representation
V15.0603 Identical to V41.0058 and
V11.0603. 4 points.
This seminar centers on “reading
race” as it is variously theorized in a
range of cultural productions (fiction, personal essays, cultural/literary
criticism, sociology, independent
films, and pop culture). The emphasis on Asian American work is situated within a comparative framework
that includes writers and filmmakers
from diverse backgrounds who
explore ways of analyzing “differences.” Part of the course is devoted
to examining re-readings of race that
have significantly redefined the
“canon” of American literature. We
look at how the relationship between
racial “representation” (political,
demographic, social historical, and
cultural) and constructions of national identity has been interrogated,
especially in reference to the politics
of “multicultural literacy.”
Constitutional Challenges
Affecting African, Latino, and
Asian American Communities
V15.0327 Formerly Asian Americans
and U.S. Politics. Identical to
V53.0800, V62.0800, and
V11.0800. 4 points.
Examines how the American legal
system decided constitutional challenges affecting the empowerment of
African, Latino, and Asian American
communities from the 19th century
to the present. Topics include the
denial of citizenship and naturalization to slaves and immigrants, government sanctioned segregation, the
struggle for reparations for descendants of slavery and Japanese Americans during World War II, employment discrimination and affirmative
action, racial profiling/police brutality/hate crimes, language rights, and
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
•
43
redistricting issues. Course requirements include attending and reporting on a related activity in the community, a midterm, and an interative
oral and written final project examining a present-day issue affecting all
three racial minority groups in New
York City and proposing measures to
collectively address the issue.
Asian American Gender and
Sexuality
V15.0604 Identical to V97.0604.
4 points.
Looks at gender and sexualities within racialized Asian/Pacific/American
contexts. How are masculinity and
femininity constructed? What is
“straight” A/P/A sexuality and what
are “queer” A/P/A discourses? What
do you do with all those images of
Madame Butterfly, geisha girls, the
Kama Sutra, transvestite prostitutes,
Oriental massage parlors, servant
boys, asexual computer nerds, island
“natives,” and the “exotic” erotic?
What is the connection between
Asian gender and sexuality to A/P/A
identity?
Chinatown and the American
Imagination: A Field Research
Course
V15.0607 Identical to K20.1229 and
V99.0353. 4 points.
What is a “Chinatown”? The word
alone evokes many images, sounds,
smells, and tastes from many different sensibilities. For recent immigrants it can be a home away from
home, for “outsiders” an exotic place
for cheap eats, for male action flick
fans Chow Yun Fat (or Mark Walhberg) in The Corruptor, and for you?
(Fill in the blank.) We explore the
nooks and crannies of Chinatown in
44
•
the American imagination and in its
New York real time, nonvirtual existence. How do we know what we
know and not know? What does
Chinatown have to do with the formation of normative “American”
identities? What are the possibilities
(and limits) of crossing cultural
divides? Class members individually
and/or in groups research, experience,
and document a chain of persons,
places, and/or events creating their
own narrative “tour” of this place’s
meanings. Novels, history books,
tourist guides, films, and pop culture
supplement the primary “text” of
New York Chinatown. This is a collaborative, discussion intensive, field
research-driven class.
Topics in A/P/A Studies
V15.0800 4 points.
Specific topics vary from semester to
semester but can include Asian
American Music, Mapping Identities: Imagined Communities and the
Net, Poetics of Performance, Asian/
African Caribbean Literature, Global
Youth Cultures, Asian Americans of
Mixed Heritage, and Comparative
Asian/Black American Cinema
among other select courses.
LANGUAGE COURSES
Elementary Tagalog I, II
V15.0401, 0402 4 points.
An introduction to Tagalog with an
emphasis on mastering basic grammar skills and working vocabulary.
Lessons incorporate discussions on
history, current events, literature,
pop culture, and native values. The
course is open to beginning language
students and lessons are modified
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
according to the needs of individual
students. Because language is key to
connecting with community concerns, the course also includes field
trips to Filipino neighborhoods in
Queens and Jersey City.
Intermediate Tagalog I, II
V15.0403, 0404 4 points.
At this level, when the basic skills
and working vocabulary have been
mastered, emphasis can be placed on
the linguistic rules to enable the student to communicate with more
competence. There is also focus on
translation. Lessons use a holistic
approach and incorporate discussions
on history, current events, literature,
pop culture, and native values. To
observe and experience the language
at work, the course includes field
trips to Filipino centers in the New
York-New Jersey area as well as
invited guests who converse with
students about their life and work in
Tagalog.
Elementary Cantonese I, II
V15.0410, 0411 Identical to
V33.0410 and V33.0411. 4 points.
See description under East Asian
Studies (33).
Intermediate Cantonese I, II
V15.0412, 0413 Identical to
V33.0412 and V33.0413. 4 points.
See description under East Asian
Studies (33).
DEPARTMENT OF
Biology (23)
S I LV E R C E N T E R , 1 0 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, R O O M 1 0 0 9 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 8 .
(212) 998-8200. [email protected].
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Furmanski
DIRECTOR OF
UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Scicchitano
Note: The Department of Biology
administers the earth and environmental science courses and minor
offered by the College. For more
information, see Earth and
Environmental Science (49).
Faculty
T
he principal educational aims of the Department of Biology are to provide a broad
and intensive background in modern biology for those interested in careers in the
biological and environmental sciences, including health-related fields, and to offer
topical courses on contemporary issues in life and environmental sciences of interest to nonscience majors. An important emphasis of the department is preprofessional training, and the
department has an unusually successful record in placing students in graduate, medical, and
dental schools around the country.
The department has a distinguished and diverse faculty with active research interests in fields including molecular biology, biochemistry, genetics, evolution, differentiation,
plant molecular biology and development, cell biology, cellular and molecular immunology,
virology, physiology, microbiology, biophysics, neurobiology, genomics, and bioinformatics.
These laboratories, and those of affiliated faculty, provide extraordinary opportunities for
undergraduate research experiences at a variety of levels.
Professors Emeriti:
Brick, Crotty, Dowling, Heusser,
Hirshfield, Mitra, Strand
Carroll and Milton Petrie
Professor of Biology:
Coruzzi
Margaret and Herman Sokol
Associate Professor of Sciences:
Small
Vincent Astor Visiting Research
Professor of Biology:
Gould
Professors:
Azmitia, Benfey, Broyde, Desplan,
Furmanski, Reiss, Sanes, Scott, Shapley, Stotzky
Program
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
The science of biology concerns itself
with the workings of life in all its
varied forms. Over the past several
years, biology has been revolution-
Associate Professors:
Aoki, Borowsky, Fitch, Rampino,
Rushlow, Scicchitano, Tranchina,
Volk
Assistant Professors:
Blau, Chang, Holmes, Hubbard,
Kirov, Piano, Reyes, Tan
Research Professor:
Ziff
Research Assistant Professor:
Gunsalus
Adjunct Associate Professors:
Estol, Flax
Adjunct Assistant Professors:
Bartido, Goldberg, Grew, Jaeger,
ized with the development of powerful techniques in molecular and cellular biology, genomics, and bioinformatics that are now being applied
to research across the spectrum of the
science, from genetics and differentiation to biomedicine, field studies,
Kramer, Lee, Maenza-Gmelch,
Rogers, Sideris
Visiting Research Professors:
Balick, Boom, Burger, Cerami,
Drlica, Dubnau, Fisher, Kinally,
Lentz, Macino, Mindich, Novick,
Padoch, Smith, Stevenson
Visiting Research Associate
Professors:
Daly, Tolias, Tully
Visiting Research Assistant
Professors:
Cameron, DeSalle, McCutcheon,
Motley, Rosenbaum, Schuster,
Wheeler
and animal behavior. The department’s programs of study and
research reflect this contemporary
view of biology.
The department offers students
the opportunity to explore the various areas of current biology in an
BIOLOGY
•
45
integrated yet diverse program that
builds from a solid foundation of the
basic elements of molecular and cellular biology, genetics, evolution,
organ systems, and population studies. Students are exposed to modern
concepts, state-of-the-art approaches,
and current methods of experimentation in molecular biology and biochemistry within introductory courses taken at the very outset of their
studies. A variety of intermediate
courses then provides in-depth exploration of the major areas of biology,
from molecular genetics to field biology. Advanced students may register
for graduate-level courses, which are
most often given in the specialized
areas of faculty research. Many
options are available to create individualized programs of study, including a track in environmental science.
For more information, see Earth and
Environmental Science (49). Courses are
reviewed and updated regularly to
reflect the advances made in the biological sciences.
This program provides outstanding preparation for careers in
research, academia, medicine, dentistry, and related fields. Graduates of
the department have a remarkable
record of success in acceptance into
professional schools and in establishing notable careers in the biomedical
sciences.
Other courses offered by the
department are designed to acquaint
nonscience majors with contemporary issues in biology. Such courses
are often topical, addressing problems like environmental pollution,
limits of the earth, human physiology, and sexually transmitted diseases.
Outstanding and highly motivated students are offered special opportunities for honors work, independent study, summer laboratory
research, internships, and other
enhancements.
Upper-level students may become
involved in research projects in faculty laboratories through the many formal and informal opportunities
afforded by the department.
The department has a tradition of
important research accomplishment
and contains several specialized
research and laboratory facilities that
are integrated into the educational
programs. These include the undergraduate Molecular Biology Laboratory, the Scanning and Transmission
Electron Microscope Facility, and the
Tissue Culture Facility. Field studies
46
•
BIOLOGY
are carried out at many regional sites,
including Black Rock Forest, a
3,700-acre preserve for research and
education in ecology and environmental science, located about one
and a half hours from New York City
and operated by the Black Rock Forest Consortium, of which New York
University is a member. The department offers other field courses in
biology and environmental science
that involve travel to different
regions of the United States and to
foreign countries.
Students with questions about
majoring or minoring in biology
should visit the office of the Department of Biology. Those declaring a
major in biology are assigned a faculty adviser from the department; students meet with that professor to
design a program of study, determine
course selections, and discuss career
goals. The faculty adviser is also
available to provide guidance concerning the many options and opportunities afforded by the department
for curricular enhancement, including research experiences.
MAJOR (BACHELOR OF
ARTS)
The following courses (completed
with grades of C- or higher and a
minimum GPA of 2.0 in all courses
required by the major) are required:
V23.0011-0012, V23.0021-0022,
and five other 4-point, upper-level
courses in biology; chemistry:
V25.0101-0102, V25.0103-0104,
V25.0243-0244, and V25.02450246; physics: V85.0011-0012; and
mathematics: V63.0121. A maximum of 4 points in either Independent Study, V23.0997, 0998, or
Internship in Biology, V23.0980,
0981, may be counted toward fulfilling the major requirements. To
permit the maximal choice of appropriate advanced courses, we strongly
recommend that students take
biology (V23.0011-0012), chemistry
(V25.0101-0102, V25.0103-0104),
and mathematics in their freshman
year and V23.0021-0022 as
sophomores.
A number of graduate courses are
available for undergraduate major
programs. Programs of majors must
be approved each term by a department adviser.
Major with a minor in computer
science: For students who wish to
combine their biology training with
basic information on computer operations. Course requirements are
mathematics (V63.0121) and computer science (V22.0101, V22.0102,
and V22.0201). It may be necessary
for some students to take 18 points
per semester to accommodate this
minor.
MINOR
The following courses (completed
with grades of C- or higher and a
minimum GPA of 2.0 in all biology
courses) are required for a minor in
biology: V23.0011-0012, plus
V23.0021-0022 (strongly recommended) or any two upper-level,
4-point courses. If V23.0021-0022
are not taken for the minor, it is
strongly recommended (but not
required) that students still take
V25.0101-0102 and V25.01030104. Also strongly recommended
are V25.0243-0244 and V25.02450246. Students interested in a minor
in biology should consult the director of undergraduate studies as early
as possible in order to plan a course
of study that meets their needs.
B.S./B.E. PROGRAM
The department offers a joint fiveyear B.S./B.E. program with Stevens
Institute of Technology. Students
receive the B.S. degree in biology
from New York University and the
B.E. degree in either chemical or
civil (environmental) engineering
from Stevens. Further information
about the program is available from
Mr. Joseph Hemmes in the College
Advising Center, Silver Center,
100 Washington Square East, Room
905; (212) 998-8130.
ADVANCED PLACEMENT
Students who achieve satisfactory
grades on the College Entrance
Examination Board Advanced Placement Test may be granted advanced
placement. Advanced placement
ordinarily allows exemption of
V23.0011-0012.
GRADUATE COURSES
A number of courses in specialized
fields are given at the graduate level.
Courses at the 1000 level are available to undergraduates who have the
necessary prerequisites. To take some
2000-level graduate courses in biology, students must obtain the signature of the course instructor and the
director of undergraduate studies and
have their registration material
approved in the department’s graduate office.
HONORS PROGRAM
Candidates for a degree with honors
in biology must have an overall
grade point average of at least 3.5
and a minimum 3.5 grade point
average in all science and mathemat-
Courses
COURSES THAT DO NOT
COUNT TOWARD THE
MAJOR OR MINOR
The Biological World
V23.0002 No prerequisites. Does not
count toward the major or minor in biology. May not be taken after V23.00110012. Lecture and laboratory. Estol.
4 points.
Designed to acquaint students with
the major unifying themes that characterize biological systems, with
emphasis on the structure and function of the major organ systems in
humans. Applies fundamental biological principles to current advances
in the field. Coordinates lecture and
laboratory to clearly demonstrate
relationships of biological structure
and function.
Human Reproduction and
Development
V23.0003 No prerequisites. Does not
count toward the major or minor in biology. May not be taken after V23.00110012. Lecture. Flax. 4 points.
Introduction to human reproductive
anatomy, physiology and endocrinology, conception, pregnancy and
development of the human embryo,
childbirth, and principles of human
heredity. Related topics are contraception and sexually transmitted
diseases.
Human Physiology
V23.0004 No prerequisites. Does not
count toward the major or minor in biology. May not be taken after V23.00110012. Lee. 4 points.
Investigation into how the human
body functions. Overview of cellular
structure and function is followed by
an in-depth study of the nervous,
endocrine, cardiovascular, and other
organ systems.
ics courses required for the major.
They must take at least one semester
of Independent Study, V23.0997,
0998, or Internship, V23.0980,
0981, and register for V23.0999
during the senior year to prepare an
honors thesis based on the Independent Study or Internship. Application forms, available at the departmental office, must be submitted by
the beginning of the final semester.
It is the student’s responsibility to
secure a faculty member to sponsor
the research and to provide laboratory space and equipment. All necessary arrangements should be completed by the end of the junior year.
For general requirements, please see
Honors and Awards.
The Living Environment
V23.0008 Identical to V49.0008. No
prerequisites. Does not count toward the
major or minor in biology. Counts toward
the minor in earth and environmental science. May not be taken after V23.00110012. Estol. 4 points.
An issues-oriented course in biology
emphasizing the current understanding of fundamental contemporary
matters in life and environmental
sciences. Covers topics such as
evolution, biodiversity, genetic
engineering, the human genome,
bioterrorism, climate, pollution, and
diseases. Examines the interrelationship within living systems and their
environments.
MAJOR/MINOR COURSES
Environmental Science: Principles and Practice
V23.0880 No prerequisites. Does not
count toward the major or minor in biology. Estol. 4 points.
Basic course for nonscience majors.
Topics include sources of pollution;
routes of human exposure; human
health effects; and effects on local,
regional, and global environments.
Discusses problems in measuring and
modeling inputs and pollutant
movement in the environment as
well as current legislation and regulations. Throughout, course presents
current examples (“case studies”) of
environmental problems to show
how the basic principles examined
are applied in the real world.
CORE COURSES IN BIOLOGY
Principles of Biology I, II
V23.0011, 0012 Prerequisite for
V23.0011 and V23.0012: high school
chemistry; prerequisite for V23.0012:
V23.0011 or equivalent. Note:
V23.0012 may be taken before
V23.0011 only by permission of the
instructor. Strongly recommended, at least
concurrently: V25.0101-0102,
V25.0103-0104. Lecture and laboratory.
Furmanski and staff. 4 points per term.
Introductory course mainly for science majors designed to acquaint the
student with the fundamental principles and processes of biological systems. Subjects include the basics of
chemistry pertinent to biology, biochemistry and cell biology, genetics
and molecular biology, anatomy and
physiology, neurobiology, ecology,
population genetics, and history and
classification of life forms and evolution. Laboratory exercises illustrate
the basics of experimental biology,
molecular biology, biochemistry, and
genetics as well as the diversity of
life forms and organ systems. Students are introduced to modern techniques and research literature.
Molecular and Cell Biology I, II
V23.0021, 0022 Prerequisites:
V23.0011-0012. Prerequisite for
V23.0022: V23.0021; prerequisites or
corequisites: V25.0101-0102 and
V25.0103-0104. Note: a grade of Cor higher in both V23.0011 and
V23.0012 is needed to enter V23.0021.
Lecture and recitation. Scicchitano and
staff. 4 points per term.
In-depth study of cell biology, with
an emphasis on the molecular aspects
of cell function. Topics include protein structure and synthesis, gene
expression and its regulation, cell
replication, and specialized cell structure and function. Examines
BIOLOGY
•
47
immunology, cancer, developmental
biology, and evolution as integrated
systems of molecular and cellular
functions.
UPPER-LEVEL COURSES IN
BIOLOGY
Field Laboratory in Ecology
V23.0016 Prerequisite: permission of
instructor. Lecture. Maenza-Gmelch.
4 points.
Provides field experience related to
ecology. Study sites include pine barrens, salt marsh, swamp, maritime
forest, coastal beach and dune, urban
wildlife refuge, and bog. Exercises in
carbon storage, effects of biological
invasions on native communities,
restoration ecology, and wetland
processes, combined with careful
attention to the identification of the
floral and faunal components of each
ecosystem, provide the students with
strong practical experience that is
coordinated with the syllabus for
Introduction to Ecology. Selected current readings from Science and Nature,
as well as relevant methodology
papers from the scientific literature,
are used. Practical skills gained in
this course are familiarity with the
local flora and fauna, use of topographic maps and the global positioning system, methods for sampling
natural communities, water sampling, familiarity with the format of a
scientific paper, and enhanced understanding of complex ecosystems.
Field Biology and Elements of
Ecology
V23.0017 Prerequisites: V23.00110012 and permission of instructor.
Enrollment limited. Lecture, laboratory,
and field exercises. Maenza-Gmelch.
4 points.
In-depth, participatory field studies
of the flora and fauna that define
major natural habitats. Field sites
explored include regional pine barrens, salt marsh, swamp, upland forest, maritime forest, coastal beach
and dune, urban wildlife refuge, and
bog. Discussions of plant-environment interactions, contemporary ecological issues, and other elements of
ecology are carefully coordinated
with our field studies. This class is
offered on Saturdays in the spring
and at the Black Rock Forest in the
summer.
48
•
BIOLOGY
Vertebrate Anatomy
V23.0023 Prerequisites: V23.00110012 or permission of instructor. Lecture
and laboratory. Sideris. 4 points.
Study of the evolutionary development
of backboned animals, with emphasis
on the mammals. Treats the major
organ systems of vertebrate groups,
with stress on structural-functional
interpretations. Laboratory work
includes detailed dissection of representative vertebrates. Field trips to the
American Museum of Natural History help illustrate some of the topics.
Principles of Animal Physiology
V23.0025 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or permission of instructor. Lecture
and laboratory. Holmes. 4 points.
A comparative course that encompasses vertebrate and invertebrate
physiology. Extensive discussion of
the anatomy and physiology of the
human cardiovascular system, the
human lung, the human kidney, and
the human brain. There is a focus on
the physiological integration of organ
systems, underlying cellular/molecular mechanisms, and adaptation.
Ventilation, organism scale and environment, blood, the cardiovascular
system, acid-base regulation,
osmoregulation, feeding, digestion
and absorption, the nervous system
and behavior, muscle, endocrine
function, and reproduction are studied. Special topics include human
physiology in extreme environments
(high-altitude and diving), a detailed
analysis of mammalian vision, animal
sleep and hibernation, and the comparative physiology of animals that
live at deep-sea hydrothermal vents.
The laboratory includes traditional
physiology experiments as well as an
introduction to bioinformatics.
Developmental Biology
V23.0026 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or permission of instructor. Benfey,
Small. 4 points.
Introduction to the principles and
experimental strategies of developmental biology. Covers the cellular
and molecular basis for pattern in the
embryo; the determination of cell
fate; cell differentiation; the genes
controlling these events; how they
are identified and studied; and the
cellular proteins that affect shape,
movement, and signaling between
cells. Special emphasis on the experimental basis for our knowledge of
these subjects from studies in fruit
flies, nematodes, frogs, plants, and
mice.
Genetics
V23.0030 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or permission of instructor. Lecture
and recitation. Rushlow. 4 points.
An introductory course in genetics
covering classical genetics, chromosome structure and mutation, gene
function and regulation, and aspects
of molecular and developmental
genetics. Recent studies in human
genetics and their applications are
also discussed.
Laboratory in Genetics
V23.0031 Prerequisites: V23.00210022, V23.0030, and permission of
instructor. Laboratory. Hubbard.
4 points.
The course covers genetic principles
by means of a project-based laboratory. Students characterize mutants
genetically and phenotypically.
Analyses of dominance, linkage,
recombination, dosage effects, and
complementation are performed in
the first part of the course. The second part of the course addresses
genetic approaches made possible by
the availability of complete genome
sequences (genomics).
Special note: Although the class
is held at the listed hours, and attendance at the start of each class session
is mandatory, the biological nature of
the work may require some laboratory time outside the scheduled laboratory session.
Gene Structure and Expression
V23.0032 Prerequisite: V23.0021
only or permission of instructor. Broyde.
4 points.
Intermediate course in the molecular
basis of gene action in viruses,
prokaryotes, and eukaryotes. Covers
topics drawn from the following areas
or other current work: structure and
organization of the genetic material,
replication, repair, transcription,
translation, recombination, oncogenesis, and regulation of gene expression.
Principles of Light and Electron
Microscopy
V23.0033 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 and permission of instructor.
Enrollment limited. Lecture and laboratory. Tan. 4 points.
The course is designed to provide
background and practical experience
in scanning electron, transmission
electron, fluorescent, and phase/DIC
microscopy. The principles and the
theory of the various types of microscopes currently available are discussed. A histological overview of
various tissues is studied in regard to
their cellular structure and function.
Optical and computational methods
of image processing useful to the biomedical scientist are also explored.
Introduction to Recombinant
DNA Techniques
V23.0036 Prerequisites: V23.0021
and permission of instructor. Enrollment
limited. Lecture and laboratory. Tan.
4 points.
Cloning a gene. A practical course
designed to provide the interested
student with experience in basic
molecular biology techniques,
including gene amplification by
polymerase chain reaction (PCR),
DNA isolation and modification,
bacterial transformation, preparation
of plasmid DNA, and restriction
enzyme analyses.
Techniques in Cell Biology
V23.0037 Prerequisites: V23.00110012, V23.0021-0022, and permission
of instructor. Laboratory. Tan.
4 points.
Introduction to the methodology
used to study cell structure and function. In the laboratory, students
study the fundamentals of cell biology and the experimental approaches
used to examine the cell. Experimental topics cover cellular, subcellular,
and macromolecule localization, biochemical analysis of the cell; and cell
culture techniques.
Reproductive Biology
V23.0041 Identical to V97.0042.
Prerequisites: V23.0011-0112 or permission of instructor. Lee. 4 points.
Detailed examination of male and
female reproductive physiology at
the molecular, cellular, and organism
levels. Emphasis on neuroendocrine
regulation of sexual differentiation,
puberty, the ovarian cycle, pregnancy,
parturition, lactation, and sexual
behaviors. Various modes of
courtship and reproduction used by
different species are considered.
Experimental research in gender differences in higher brain functions is
also examined.
Endocrinology
V23.0048 Prerequisite: V23.00110012, V23.0025, and permission of
instructor. Scott. 4 points.
Introduction to endocrinology with
attention to the signals generating
hormone synthesis and release, the
means by which hormones mediate
tissue responses, and the mechanisms
and consequences of their interaction
with target organs. Emphasizes the
physiologic aspects of these processes.
Immunology
V23.0050 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or permission of instructor. Reiss.
4 points.
Introduction to immunology with
attention to the genetics, molecular,
and cell biology of antibody production; T-cell mediated immune
responses; and innate immunity. Topics include the nature of antigens,
hypersensitivities, transplantation,
cytokines, autoimmunity, cancer,
response to infection, and vaccines.
Evolution
V23.0058 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or permission of instructor. Fitch.
4 points.
Introductory course covering a broad
range of topics in modern evolutionary thought and practice, including
ecological context of evolutionary
change, interpretation of the fossil
record, patterns of extinctions, speciations and biogeographic distributions, genetic variation and population structure, natural selection and
adaptations, reconstruction of evolutionary history and phylogeny, molecular evolution, evolutionary novelties and the evolution of developmental systems, and human evolution and social issues.
Introduction to Ecology
V23.0063 Prerequisites: V23.00110112 or permission of instructor.
Maenza-Gmelch. 4 points.
Presents basic ecological principles
and concepts, including ecological
relationships within ecosystems,
energy flow, biogeochemical cycles,
limiting factors, community ecology,
population ecology, niche, climax,
and major ecological habitats. These
topics are related to current environmental problems such as habitat
destruction, climate change, biological invasions, loss of biodiversity,
overpopulation, etc. Several field
trips are scheduled during the regular class periods.
Introduction to Biophysics
V23.0096 Prerequisites: V23.0021,
V85.0011-0012, V25.0101-0102, or
permission of instructor. Recommended:
V25.0243. 4 points.
Interdisciplinary approach to biological problems. Emphasis on quantitative, physical, and chemical interpretation of biological processes. Topics
include physical aspects of molecular
structure, physical methods used to
investigate primary reactions in
nature, energy transfer, apparatus for
energy conversion processes, membrane transport, biophysics of nerves,
and theoretical biology.
Introduction to Neural Science
V23.0100 Identical to V80.0100.
Prerequisite: V23.0011-0012. May not
be used for the major or minor in biology
if G23.1110 or G23.1111 is taken.
Feldman. 4 points.
See description under Neural Science
(80).
Cellular and Molecular
Neuroscience
V23.0201 Identical to V80.0201.
Prerequisites: V23.0021, V25.0243,
and V23.0100. Co- or prerequisite:
V85.0011. Aoki, Reyes. 4 or 5 points.
See description under Neural Science
(80).
Behavioral and Integrative
Neuroscience
V23.0202 Formerly Physiological Psychology II, V23.0040. Identical to
V80.0202 and V89.0052. Prerequisites: V89.0001, V23.0011,
V23.0012, and either V89.0024 or
V23.0100. Note: V89.0024 may not be
used for the major or minor in biology.
Glimcher, Suzuki. 4 or 5 points.
See description under Neural Science
(80).
Developmental Neurobiology
V23.0303 Identical to V80.0303.
Prerequisites: V23.0100 and
V23.0021. Sanes. 4 points.
See description under Neural Science
(80).
Internship in Biology
V23.0980, 0981 Prerequisites:
V23.0021-0022 and at least two additional upper-level courses in biology with
a minimum GPA of 3.0 overall and in
all science and mathematics courses
required for the major, and permission of
a sponsor and the director of undergraduate studies. Intended primarily for biology
majors. The details of individual intern-
BIOLOGY
•
49
ships are established by the director of
undergraduate studies. 2 or 4 points.
Field or laboratory research with a
sponsor at an organization or institution in the metropolitan area other
than the Department of Biology. Students with the necessary background
in course work and who, in the opinion of the sponsor, possess intellectual
independence and ability may register for an internship in some field of
biology. The student must approach
an individual at the organization or
institution to obtain sponsorship and
agreement to provide counsel and any
necessary space and facilities for the
research project. The director of
undergraduate studies maintains a file
of suitable opportunities and is available to help students identify organizations of interest. The student must
submit a lab or research notebook and
a final paper.
Independent Study
V23.0997, 0998 Prerequisites: completion of V23.0021-0022 with a minimum GPA of 3.0 overall and in all science and mathematics courses required
for the major, permission of a faculty
member in the Department of Biology who
will act as a sponsor, and approval by the
director of undergraduate studies. Intended primarily for biology majors. 2 or 4
points.
Field or laboratory research with a
faculty sponsor in the Department of
Biology. Students with the necessary
background in course work and who,
in the opinion of a faculty sponsor,
possess intellectual independence and
ability may register for independent
study in some field of biology. The
student must approach a faculty
member in his or her field of interest
to obtain sponsorship and agreement
to provide counsel and any necessary
space and facilities for the research
project. Requires a written report on
the research.
Honors Seminar and Thesis
Preparation
V23.0999 Prerequisites: V23.0997 or
V23.0998 or V23.0980 or V23.0981;
a minimum GPA of 3.0 overall; a minimum GPA of 3.5 in all science and
mathematics courses required for the
major; and permission of a sponsor and
the director of undergraduate studies.
Open to biology majors only. May not be
used for the major in biology. 2 points.
Course for exceptional biology students who have completed at least
one semester of laboratory research
50
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BIOLOGY
(V23.0997, 0998, 0980, 0981) and
are able to expand this work into a
thesis. Requires a full literature
search of the subject and a formal
written report on the research in
publication form. Examines important new trends in biology through
reading and discussion of current
review articles.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Environmental Health
G23.1004 Identical to G48.1004.
May not be taken after G23.2305
(G48.2305). Lippman. 4 points.
Discusses some of the basic concepts
of environmental science and major
global environmental problems, such
as global warming, soil erosion,
overpopulation, and loss of biota.
Another part of the course focuses on
environmental health problems, such
as exposure to lead, mercury, halogenated hydocarbons, asbestos, and
radon. Other lectures are devoted
to carcinogenesis, air pollution, toxic
wastes, epidemiology, and risk
assessment.
Toxicology
G23.1006 Identical to G48.1006.
Prerequisites: V23.0025 and
V25.0243-0244. May not be taken
after G23.2310 (G48.2310). Recommended: biochemistry. Jaeger. 4 points.
Introduction to the science of toxicology, stressing basic concepts essential to understanding the action of
exogenous chemical agents on
biological systems. Principles underlying the absorption, metabolism,
and elimination of chemicals are
discussed. Toxicokinetics, specific
classes of toxic responses, and experimental methods used to assess
toxicity are also examined.
Advanced Immunology
G23.1011 Prerequisite: permission of
instructor. Lecture. McCutcheon. 4 points.
Introduction to immunology and its
literature. Focuses on the mechanisms that govern the immune
response and also trains students in
reading and evaluating primary
research articles that are published in
peer-reviewed journals.
Advanced Topics in Cellular and
Molecular Immunology
G23.1020 Prerequisite: V23.0050 or
G23.1011 or permission of the instructor. Reiss. 4 points.
In-depth exploration of a topic in
cellular and molecular aspects of
immunity, including cellular interactions, antigen processing and presentation, pathogenesis, viral immunology, and cytokines.
Microbiology
G23.1027 Prerequisites: V25.02430244 and some upper-level biology.
Strongly recommended: G23.1046
and/or V23.0025. Stotzky. 4 points.
Introduction to the evolution, morphology, physiology, biochemistry,
genetics, and ecology of the protists.
Emphasis is on bacteria, fungi, and
viruses, although algae and protozoa
are considered. Explores the similarities and differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells and the
microbiology of natural habitats.
Scanning Electron Microscopic
Techniques
G23.1029 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. Lecture and laboratory.
Tan. 4 points.
Provides a working knowledge of and
experience in scanning electron
microscopy. Emphasis is on understanding the operation of the SEM
(including routine maintenance), the
design of the SEM, interaction of
beam and specimen, a variety of specimen preparation techniques, photographic techniques for microscopy,
and photographic procedures for presentation of data. A functional perspective of the ultrastructure as seen
through the SEM is also studied.
Special Topics in Physiology
G23.1031 Prerequisite: V23.0025 or
equivalent. Scott. 4 points.
Designed for students with a background in mammalian physiology.
Topics include reproduction biology,
regulation of ion and water excretion,
maintenance and control of cardiovascular function, and respiratory
physiology.
Electron Microscopic Techniques
G23.1033 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. Enrollment limited. Lecture
and laboratory. Tan. 4 points.
Introduction to the principles and
techniques of electron microscopy as
applied to biological systems. The
theory of tissue preparation by vari-
ous means and the relationship
between cell structure and function
are examined through the microscope. Laboratory includes methods
of preparation of animal (or plant)
tissue for visualization of profiles in
the transmission electron microscope.
Experimental Microbiology
G23.1037 Prerequisite: G23.1027 or
equivalent (corequisite with permission of
the instructor). Not open to students who
have taken G23.1057 or equivalent.
Enrollment limited. Laboratory. Stotzky.
4 points.
Acquaints students with general
principles and procedures of microbiology and advanced experimental
techniques. Students are expected to
undertake individual laboratory
projects and to make use of original
literature.
Biochemistry I, II
G23.1046, 1047 Identical to
G25.1881, 1882. Prerequisite for
G23.1046: V25.0244 or V25.0342.
Prerequisite for G23.1047: G23.1046.
Kallenbach, Staff. 4 points per term.
Two-semester course taught jointly
by faculty from the Departments of
Biology and Chemistry. Topics
include organic and physical chemistry of proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids; enzyme
kinetics and mechanisms; membranes and transport; bioenergetics
and intermediary metabolism; molecular genetics and regulation.
Cell Biology
G23.1051 Prerequisites or corequisites:
G23.1046,1047, and written permission of the instructor. Chang. 4 points.
Examination of the molecular mechanisms underlying cell proliferation
and differentiation. Five topics are
chosen for discussion: signal transduction, regulation of cell cycle,
cytoskeleton, cell-cell and cell-matrix
interaction, and intracellular transport. The importance of these issues
in the understanding of development,
immunity, and cancer is emphasized.
Techniques in Microbiology
G23.1057 Not open to students who
have taken courses in techniques in microbiology. Corequisites: G23.1027 or
equivalent, and permission of the instructor. Laboratory. Stotzky. 2 points.
Basic techniques in microbiology.
Introduction to the general procedures of microbiology.
Tropical Field Ecology
G23.1065 Meets in Mexico in March
during spring recess. Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. Borowsky. 2 points.
The fauna and flora of tropical Mexico with emphasis on the freshwater
fish and birds of the area. Habitats
studied include cloud and tropical
deciduous forests, desert and river
edge, and limestone caves.
molecular and genetic studies in
model plant and animal systems.
Special Topics in Evolution and
Development
G23.1068 Prerequisite for undergraduates: permission of the instructor. Seminar.
Desplan. 2 points.
While developmental biology has
mostly focused on similarity among
species, the comparison of development in different species has made it
possible to understand how morphological differences between species
are mediated by changes in gene networks and to follow how evolution
allowed organisms to adapt to their
environment. Through a detailed
analysis of recent papers in this field,
this course provides a framework to
replace development in an evolutionary context.
Neotropical Field Botany
G23.1074 Prerequisites: G23.10721073 or equivalent. Lecture and fieldwork. Lentz. 2 points.
Intensive course providing a practical
knowledge of botanical field techniques and an introduction to the
plant communities of the neotropics,
with field exercises to expose students
to different neotropical environments,
each with its unique flora and concomitant collection challenges. A
basic knowledge of field collection
methodology is essential for students
who wish to conduct botanical
research of their own design.
Principles of Evolution
G23.1069 Prerequisites: V23.0058
and either V23.0030 or permission of the
instructor. Fitch. 4 points.
Patterns of evolution and adaptation
as seen in the paleontological record;
speciation, extinction, and the geographic distribution of populations;
the basics of population genetics and
molecular evolution. Elements of
numerical taxonomy and recent developments in phylogenetic systematics.
Ecological Botany
G23.1070 Taught at Black Rock Forest, a 3,800-acre teaching and research
facility affiliated with NYU and located about 35 miles north of New York
City. Lecture and laboratory. MaenzaGmelch. 4 points.
Concentrated course in the study of
plant-environment interrelationships,
floristics, plant systematics, and sampling techniques.
Molecular Controls of Organismal
Form and Function
G23.1072 Prerequisites: V23.0011,
0012, V23.0021, 0022, V25.01010102, and V25.0103-0104, or permission of the instructor. Benfey, Coruzzi.
4 points.
Covers metabolism, signaling, and
development, highlighting use of
Biotic Resources: Integrative
Approaches to Biodiversity and
Conservation
G23.1073 Prerequisite: permission of
instructor. DeSalle, Lentz. 4 points.
Covers population genetics, conservation biology, and biogeography.
Economic Botany
G23.1075 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. Lecture and laboratory.
Lentz. 4 points.
Intensive course offering students a
working knowledge of currently and
historically used plant products and
portions of the plant kingdom with
significant economic potential. Topics are organized by use categories
rather than by phylogenetic arrangement. Plant sources of foods, medicines, stimulants, fibers, resins,
waxes, spices, perfumes, dyes, tannins, construction materials, and
many other products are addressed,
as is the need to conserve scarce
resources. Discusses both Western
and non-Western plant-use practices.
Animal Virology
G23.1080 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 and permission of instructor. Reiss.
4 points.
Details the molecular life cycles of
viruses that infect mammalian cells.
Topics to be covered include disease
pathogenesis, immune evasion mechanisms, vaccination, and genetic
immunization vectors.
Genes and Behavior
G23.1082 Prerequisite: senior standing. Lecture. Blau. 4 points.
Survey of principles and patterns of
animal behavior. Covers classical
ethological research of Lorenz and
BIOLOGY
•
51
others and modern research on the
molecular basis of behavior, especially in model systems. Behaviors studied include reproductive behavior,
rhythmic behavior, learning and
memory, and feeding behavior.
Neuronal Plasticity
G23.1101 Prerequisites: V23.00210022 or V23.0100. Lecture. Staff.
4 points.
Introductory survey of neuronal
plasticity and the principles of
neuroanatomy, pharmacology, and
development of the brain and spinal
cord. Presents various forms of plasticity from regeneration to neuronal
transplantation. Topics include
dynamic instability, addiction,
depression, hibernation, spinal injury,
and Alzheimer’s disease. Covers the
role of neurotransmitters and growth
factors in regulating brain plasticity.
Stresses interactions between neurons, astroglial cells, and other nonneuronal cells. Summarizes animal
and human studies of functional and
structural recovery.
Drugs and the Brain
G23.1102 Lecture. Staff. 4 points.
Introduction to neurochemical analysis of normal and pathological brain
function. Discusses the pharmacological description of psychoactive
drugs, their therapeutic uses, and the
resultant behavioral effects. Also
includes sedatives, antidepressants,
stimulants, and hallucinogens.
Molecular Pharmacology in Biology and Medicine
G23.1103 Prerequisites: V23.0011,
0012, G23.1046,1047, and permission
of instructor. Lecture. Kramer. 4 points.
Detailed examination of mechanisms
of drug action at organismal, tissue,
cellular, and molecular levels,
emphasizing receptors, receptor-effector coupling, neurotransmitters, and
autonomic and central nervous system pharmacology.
Laboratory Animal Science
G23.1119 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. Enrollment limited. Lecture
and laboratory. Novotney. 4 points.
Laboratory animal science and experimental methods important for life
science students in their future
research and teaching activities.
Topics include ethics of animal use,
federal and New York State regulations governing use of animals in
research, animal models and experi-
52
•
BIOLOGY
mental design, analgesia and
euthanasia, principles of surgery and
postsurgical care, diseases of laboratory animals, pathology and postmortem techniques, occupational
health, animal room environment,
and facility design.
Applications of Molecular Biology
G23.1121 Corequisites: G23.10461047 or permission of the instructor.
Staff. 4 points.
Introduction to the application of
recombinant DNA technology and
gene structure and function. Examines promotor structure and function
and mechanisms of RNA splicing,
capping, and polyadenylation in
detail. Covers topics of importance
for gene regulation, such as
rearrangement of the immunoglobulin genes during B cell development,
steroid hormone control of gene
expression, the implications of transposable genetic elements, methylation, and chromatin structure.
Laboratory in Molecular Biology
I, II, III, IV
G23.1122, 1123, 1124, 1125 Corequisites: G23.1046-1047 and permission
of the instructor. Must be taken in
sequence. Laboratory. Kirov, Rushlow.
4 points.
Analyzes selective developmental systems using recombinant DNA techniques. Purification of nucleic acids
from eukaryotes and prokaryotes;
bacteria transformation; restriction
enzyme analysis; immobilization of
nucleic acids on nitrocellulose membrane; and DNA-DNA, DNA-RNA
hybridization.
Advanced Genetics
G23.1126 Prerequisites: V23.0030 or
equivalent, and permission of instructor.
Hubbard. 4 points.
In-depth study of experimental
genetics from Mendel to the present,
emphasizing methods and data by
which genetic principles were developed and the genetic approach to
biological research. Covers classic
experiments on patterns of inheritance, chromosomes and genetic
linkage, genetic variability, mutagenesis, DNA as the genetic material,
and the nature of thegenetic code.
Special topics from both classic and
recent literature include (but are not
limited to) genetic screens, epistasis
analysis, suppressors/enhancers, and
mosaic analysis.
Genomics
G23.1128 Prerequisites: V23.00210022. Lecture. Benfey. 4 points.
Introduction to genomic methods for
acquiring and analyzing genomic
DNA sequence. Topics: genomic
approaches to determining gene
function, including determining
genome-wide expression patterns; the
use of genomics for disease-gene discovery and epidemiology; the emrging fields of comparative genomics
and proteomics; and applications of
genomics to the pharmaceutical and
agbiotech sectors. Throughout the
course, the computational methods
for analysis of genomic data are
stressed.
Evolutionary Genetics and
Genomics
G23.1129 Prerequisites: G23.1069,
V23.0030 and permission of instructor.
Borowsky. 4 points.
Explores the genetic and genomic
mechanisms underlying evolutionary
change. Emphases are on complex
trait evolution and its quantitative
analysis and the impact of modern
mapping and genomic techniques on
evolutionary biology. Topics include,
but are not limited to, the genetics
of adaptation and character regression, the evolution of complex characters and traits such as organ systems,
the senses, and patterns of behavior,
and methods for the study of quantitative trait locus (QTL) variation and
multifactorial systems.
Earth Biology
G23.1201 Prerequisites: two semesters
each of three of the following: biology,
chemistry, physics, calculus. Volk.
4 points.
Global sciences of life: biogeochemical cycles, biodiversity, evolution, and
human impacts. Topics: atmospheric
and oceanographic sciences; cycles of
carbon, nitrogen, phosphorous, oxygen, and sulfur; terrestrial and marine
ecosystem structure; ranges and richness of species; human-induced shifts
in land-use patterns and climate
(greenhouse effect).
Mammalogy
G23.1318 Lecture, laboratory, and
fieldwork. 4 points.
Survey the class Mammalia, with
emphasis on the North American
fauna. Covers the fossil and living
orders of mammals, including aspects
of their anatomy, physiology, and
ecology.
Fundamentals of Electrophysiology
G23.1400 Prerequisites: college-level
chemistry, two semesters of physics or calculus, and background in physiology or
permission of the instructor. Holmes,
Tranchina. 4 points.
Introduction to analysis of the physical mechanisms underlying electrical
signaling in nerve and muscle cells.
Gives students interested in research
in the neural sciences and physiological psychology an understanding
of signal processing in the nervous
system.
Mathematics in Medicine and
Biology
G23.1501 Identical to V63.0030.
Prerequisite: one semester of calculus or
permission of the instructor. Peskin,
Tranchina. 4 points.
Discussion of topics of medical
importance using mathematics as a
tool: control of the heart, optimal
principles in the lung, cell membranes, electrophysiology, countercurrent exchange in the kidney, acidbase balance, muscle, cardiac
catheterization, and computer diagnosis. Material from the physical sciences and mathematics is introduced
and developed.
Computers in Medicine and
Biology
G23.1502 Identical to V63.0032.
Prerequisite: G23.1501 or permission of
the instructor. Recommended: familiarity
with a programming language such as
FORTRAN or BASIC. Peskin,
Tranchina. 4 points.
Introduces students of biology or
mathematics to the use of computers
as tools for modeling physiological
phenomena. Each student constructs
two computer models selected from
the following: circulation, gas
exchange in the lung, control of cell
volume, and the renal countercurrent
mechanism.
BIOLOGY
•
53
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Chemistry (25)
S I LV E R
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Geacintov
ASSOCIATE CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Associate Professor
Canary
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Adjunct Professor Cutler
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR
OF UNDERGRADUATE
STUDIES
Associate Professor
Brenner
Faculty
Program
C E N T E R , 1 0 0
N E W Y O R K ,
WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, R O O M
N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 8 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 4 0 0 .
1 0 0 1,
T
he Department of Chemistry has a long tradition at the University, dating back well
before the founding of the American Chemical Society at New York University in
1876. Professor John W. Draper, the first president of the society and chair of the
department, was an early pioneer in photography, working with Samuel F. B. Morse.
The department has undertaken a major development plan, strengthening its faculty,
instructional laboratories, course offerings, and research facilities in the areas of physical, biophysical, bioorganic, and theoretical chemistry. Research areas represented by faculty members
include experimental and theoretical biophysical and physical chemistry, inorganic chemistry,
photochemistry, and organic and bioorganic chemistry. Qualified undergraduates are encouraged to participate in research as early as their sophomore year of study. The department houses state-of-the-art laboratory facilities for its undergraduate chemistry courses.
Majoring in chemistry at the College of Arts and Science provides strong preparation for graduate study in chemistry; professional education in patent law, medicine, or dentistry; and careers in industrial or pharmaceutical chemistry and biotechnology.
Professors Emeriti:
Hellman, Kosak, Lewin, Moskowitz,
Pope, Sundheim
Associate Professors:
Brenner, Canary, Evans, Rugg,
Walters
Howard Hughes Investigator and
Professor:
Schlick
Assistant Professors:
Chang, Jerschow, Schelvis,
Tuckerman
Professors:
Bačic´, Gans, Geacintov, Kallenbach,
McNelis, Miller, Schuster, Seeman,
Shapiro, Wilson, Zhang
Research Professors:
Khan, Vologodskii
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
divisions of analytical, organic, inorganic, and physical chemistry. In its
recent development, the department
is focusing its interest on physical,
biophysical, and bioorganic chemistry,
exploiting interdisciplinary areas of
theory, materials science, and biological chemistry. The department has a
large and active theoretical group in
the areas of chemical physics and biomolecular modeling. Active research
areas in the department include can-
Chemistry is the central natural science interfacing physics and mathematics with the life sciences. A
knowledge of chemistry has always
been fundamental to the investigation
of the physical world as well as to an
in-depth understanding of living systems. The range of modern chemistry
spans from chemical physics to molecular biology, merging the traditional
54
•
CHEMISTRY
Research Associate Professor:
Shafirovich
Research Scientist:
Fishman
Adjunct Professors:
Cutler, Rhodes
Clinical Assistant Professors:
Callahan, Halpin
cer research, nanotechnology, spectroscopy, and combinatorial chemistry. Graduates of the department
have found rewarding careers and
achieved distinction in all phases of
scientific life, from basic research to
commercial product development.
The late Gertrude Elion, a 1941 M.S.
in chemistry from New York University, shared the 1988 Nobel Prize in
medicine and physiology for her
research in pharmaceutical chemistry.
The department offers the major
in chemistry and in biochemistry. A
selection of elective advanced courses, undergraduate and graduate, can
be combined to provide a broad, varied program of study in chemistry.
The department also offers a number
of courses for nonscience students
and service courses for students in
the other schools. The programs of
study in chemistry prepare students
for graduate work toward the master’s degree or the doctorate for
careers in research, development, or
teaching or for further study in areas
such as medicine, dentistry, basic
medical sciences, or allied health
careers. In addition, both majors
leave students well prepared to pursue patent law or, with a minor in
economics, to enter the field of technology investment as well as management in the chemical industry.
For highly motivated students or
for students who anticipate majoring
in chemistry, the department offers
special honors courses that satisfy the
first two years of chemistry required
for majors and for the prehealth curriculum in medicine, dentistry, and
so forth. Students need permission
from the department to register for
these courses, which are limited to
small classes. Permission is based on
several factors, including background
in both mathematics and physics;
performance in high school chemistry courses; and, if offered, a placement examination. Students may be
deemed eligible to enter the second
year honors course (organic) based on
exceptional performance in the regular General Chemistry course.
MAJORS
Students thinking of majoring in
chemistry, or biochemistry, are
strongly urged to seek course advisement from the Department of Chemistry as early in their academic
careers as possible. Chemistry is a
sequential subject with courses
building on earlier courses. Delay in
taking certain key prerequisite courses can make it impossible to complete a major in four years without
summer attendance.
A grade of C or better in chemistry and other required courses is
needed for graduation in any major
in this department. Students who do
not have an average of 2.0 in departmentally required courses by the
time they have completed 64 points
in all courses may be asked to change
their major.
The major in chemistry builds on
a core of required courses in chemistry, physics, and mathematics. The
required core courses in chemistry
are V25.0101, V25.0102,
V25.0103, V25.0104, V25.0243,
V25.0244, V25.0245, V25.0246,
V25.0651, and V25.0652. The honors courses, V25.0109, V25.0110,
V25.0111, V25.0112, V25.0341,
and V25.0342, substitute for
V25.0101, V25.0102, V25.0103,
V25.0104, V25.0243, and
V25.0244, respectively. In addition
to these courses, two semesters of
calculus and two semesters of general
physics are required. A third semester of calculus is strongly recommended as preparation for
V25.0651. For students interested in
pursuing chemistry on the graduate
level or with an interest in theoretical chemistry, additional courses in
mathematics are recommended.
These include Calculus III,
V63.0123, and Linear Algebra,
V63.0124. One year of intensive calculus, V63.0221 and V63.0222,
may be substituted for calculus
V63.0121 and V63.0122, plus
V63.0123. The core, described
above, provides a basic background
in chemistry. Students normally are
encouraged to complete the courses
in general chemistry, organic chemistry, physics, and calculus prior to
entry into physical chemistry in the
third year. Alternative programs are
also possible. It is strongly advised,
however, that an advanced level
chemistry course be taken in the
third year of study, allowing at least
three more semesters to complete all
major requirements.
Undergraduate specialization in
organic, biochemical, physical, or
theoretical chemistry may be accomplished through combinations of
elective advanced undergraduate and
graduate courses open to undergraduates. These courses should be chosen in consultation with the Department of Chemistry.
For students interested in preparation for careers in the chemical
industry, there are several alternatives
available. The major in chemistry
with a minor in economics gives the
student training in chemistry with a
business background.
Students interested in careers in
medicine, dentistry, or basic medical
sciences may wish to consider the
major in biochemistry. Additional
courses in biology may be desirable
for such students. The appropriate
preprofessional adviser should be
consulted for details.
The Department of Chemistry
offers the following majors:
1. Major in chemistry: The minimum requirements, in addition to
the core courses cited above, are
completion of Experimental Methods, V25.0661, and two advanced
elective courses.
2. Major in biochemistry: The
minimum requirements, in addition
to the core courses cited above, are
Biochemistry I and II, G25.1881,
1882; Experimental Biochemistry,
G25.1885; and Biophysical Chemistry, G25.1814. Students in this
major are reminded that these courses must be taken in the proper order.
Careful course planning is required
to ensure that this can be done within a normal four-year program.
In addition to these majors, the
department offers several programs
and options that may be of interest
to students:
American Chemical Society
Certification: Students majoring in
either chemistry or biochemistry may
be certified by the American Chemical Society on graduation. Interested
students should consult with the
director of undergraduate studies
regarding the additional course
requirements for this certification.
Program in ChemistryChemical Engineering: The College
of Arts and Science offers a joint
B.S./B.E. program with Stevens
Institute of Technology. For students
interested in chemistry, the program
leads to the B.S. degree from New
York University and the B.E. (chemical or environmental engineering)
from Stevens. Further information is
available from Mr. Joseph Hemmes
and Ms.Aara Kupris Menzi in the
College Advising Center, Silver
Center, 100 Washington Square
East, Room 905; (212) 998-8130.
Bachelor of Science Degree: Students who complete the required
core courses plus Experimental
Methods, V25.0661; three advanced
electives in chemistry; The Contemporary Chemist, V25.0942; two
semesters of Advanced Individual
Study, V25.0997, 0998, or Senior
Honors in Chemistry, V25.0995,
0996; and one course in computer
CHEMISTRY
•
55
science approved by the Department
of Chemistry may elect to graduate
with the degree of Bachelor of Science (B.S.) instead of the Bachelor of
Arts (B.A.). Students should note
that the B.S. program is very difficult to complete within a normal
four-year academic program and that
it confers no particular advantage to
students in premedical or predental
programs.
MINOR
Completion of any four 4-point
courses numbered V25.0101 or higher constitutes a minor in chemistry.
Only three of the four courses may
also be used to satisfy another department’s major. No grade less than C
will count, and an average of 2.0 or
better in all chemistry courses is
required.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Laboratory courses in chemistry:
Due to the potential hazard of all
chemical experimentation, safety
goggles must be worn at all times in
the laboratories. Laboratory equipment, which is lent to the student for
the duration of the course, must be
replaced by the student if it is damaged or broken. Purchase cards must
Courses
The following courses are lectures
unless otherwise indicated. For those
designated “laboratory,” students
should see the department’s requirements for laboratories (above).
Introduction to Modern Chemistry
V25.0002 Not open to students majoring in chemistry. Science majors and prehealth students take V25.0101 or
V25.0109. No prior chemistry is
assumed. A knowledge of algebra is desirable. Laboratory and lecture. 5 points.
Selected principles and applications
of chemistry, with emphasis on the
fundamental nature of chemistry.
Basic course dealing with concepts of
atomic and molecular structure,
chemical bonding, solution chemistry, equilibrium, reaction rates, and
properties of gases, liquids, and
solids. Includes elementary problem
solving.
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CHEMISTRY
be acquired for this purpose and cost
$25. Purchase cards may be obtained
from the stockroom during the first
week of the term. Unused portions of
the deposit are redeemable. Students
who do not return borrowed laboratory equipment at the end of a course
are charged an additional fee, and
their grade may be recorded as
incomplete and not released until
“checkout” is completed.
Advanced standing: Students
who have taken college-level courses
in secondary schools and who have
achieved a grade of 4 or 5 on the
College Entrance Examination Board
Advanced Placement Test will be
granted advanced placement. For
details, see the section on the
Advanced Placement Program under
Admission. However, unless prior
laboratory work is extensive, General
Chemistry II Laboratory, V25.0104,
or in exceptional cases, the Freshman
Honors Laboratory, V25.0112, must
be taken before taking advanced
chemistry courses such as Organic
Chemistry I, V25.0243, and its laboratory. Advice about the appropriate
course should be obtained from the
director of undergraduate studies in
the department.
Research: The department
endeavors to make research opportu-
nities available during the summer
and the academic year to well-qualified students at all levels. In order to
participate in research in the department, students must both meet the
prerequisites for and register for the
research courses Advanced Individual
Study and Research, V25.0997,
0998, or, if eligible, Senior Honors in
Chemistry, V25.0995, 0996. In
either case, permission of the director
of undergraduate studies is required
before registering in these courses.
General Chemistry I
V25.0101 Prerequisites: high school
chemistry and placement into Calculus I,
V63.0121, or completion of a course in
precalculus. Corequisite: V25.0103.
4 points.
This course, along with V25.0102,
constitutes an introduction to inorganic and physical chemistry. Students who have taken no chemistry
or physics in high school may find it
advantageous to take V25.0002 prior
to attempting this course. Emphasizes the fundamental principles and
theories of chemistry. Topics discussed in V25.0101 and V25.0102
include the theories of atomic structure; stoichiometry; properties of
gases, liquids, solids, and solutions;
periodicity of the properties of elements; chemical bonding; equilibrium; kinetics, thermodynamics; acidbase reactions; electrochemistry, coordination chemistry, and nuclear
chemistry. The underlying unity of
chemistry is a basic theme.
General Chemistry II
V25.0102 Prerequisite: V25.0101
with a grade of C or better. Corequisite:
V25.0104. 4 points.
See General Chemistry I, V25.0101,
above.
HONORS PROGRAM
Candidates for a degree with honors
in chemistry must have an overall
grade point average of 3.5 and a
grade point average of 3.5 in
required courses in chemistry. They
must take two semesters of Senior
Honors in Chemistry, V25.0995,
0996. A senior thesis based on this
work must be prepared, approved by
the adviser and presented at a special
seminar in the spring term of the
senior year. Students desiring entry
into the honors program must obtain
the approval of the director of undergraduate studies prior to the end of
their junior year. For general requirements, please see Honors and Awards.
General Chemistry I Laboratory
V25.0103 Prerequisite or corequisite:
V25.0101. Laboratory. 2 points.
Provides an introduction to basic
techniques used in experimental
chemistry. Many experiments use a
computer interface to provide experience in modern methods of data collection and to allow thorough analysis of experimental results. Proper
laboratory procedures, chemical safety rules, and environmentally sound
methods of chemical disposal and
waste minimization are important
components of the course. Experiments are selected to provide illustration and reinforcement of the topics
covered in V25.0101 including manual and automated titrations, basic
chromatography, stoichiometry, thermodynamics, and colorimetry.
General Chemistry II Laboratory
V25.0104 Prerequisite: V25.0103.
Prerequisite or corequisite: V25.0102.
Laboratory. 2 points.
A continuation of V25.0103, with
emphasis on the analysis of quantitative data rather than its collection.
Experiments are selected to provide
illustration and reinforcement of the
topics covered in V25.0102 including solution chemistry, kinetics,
equilibrium, and electrochemistry.
General Chemistry I (Honors)
V25.0109 Prerequisites: high school
physics and high score in chemistry assessment exam, if given. Permission of the
department required. Corequisite:
V63.0121 or V63.0221 and
V25.0111. 4 points.
V25.0109 covers the same material as
V25.0101, except that students are
selected and a different text is used,
covering the material in greater
depth. In addition to the core material, whenever possible, current research
results pertaining to these topics are
included in class discussions.
General Chemistry II (Honors)
V25.0110 Prerequisites: V25.0109
and permission of the department. Corequisite: V25.0112. 4 points.
Provides in-depth discussion at an
introductory level on the structure
and reactions of atomic nuclei, quantum chemistry, inorganic, industrial,
and materials chemistry. Selected
topics in organic, polymer, and biochemistry may be included.
Chemical Experimentation I
V25.0111 Prerequisite: permission of
the department. Corequisite: V25.0109.
Laboratory. 2 points.
Similar in content to V25.0103,
except that experiments are selected
to provide illustration and reinforcement of topics covered in V25.0109.
Experiments include studies of stoichiometry, acid-base chemistry, properties of gases, colligative properties
of solutions, thermochemistry, and
equilibrium. Many experiments are
augmented by the use of interfaced
computers.
Chemical Experimentation II
V25.0112 Prerequisites: V25.0111
and permission of the department. Corequisite: V25.0110. Laboratory. 2 points.
Continuation of V25.0111 with the
addition of individualized projects
intended to provide a researchlike
experience.
Principles of Organic Chemistry
V25.0240 Prerequisite: V25.0002
with a grade of C or better. Not open to
chemistry majors. Intended primarily for
nonscience majors and students in the
Steinhardt School of Education. Laboratory and lecture. 5 points.
This one-semester course covers topics
such as nomenclature, conformations,
stereochemistry, chemical reactions,
and synthesis of organic compounds.
Fundamentals of biochemistry are
introduced, including carbohydrates,
lipids, amino acids, peptides, and
nucleic acids.
Organic Chemistry I
V25.0243 Prerequisite: V25.0102
with a grade of C or better. Corequisite:
V25.0245. 4 points.
This course along with V25.0244
constitutes an introduction to the
chemistry of organic compounds.
The material is presented in the
functional group framework, incorporating reaction mechanisms. Topics include structure and bonding of
organic materials, nomenclature,
conformational analysis, stereochemistry, spectroscopy, and reactions of
aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons,
alcohols, ethers, amines, and carbonyl compounds. Multifunctional
organic compounds are covered,
including topics of relevance to biochemistry, such as carbohydrates,
amino acids, peptides, and nucleic
acids.
Organic Chemistry II
V25.0244 Prerequisite: V25.0243
with a grade of C or better. Corequisite:
V25.0246. 4 points.
See V25.0243 above.
Organic Chemistry I Laboratory
V25.0245 Prerequisite: V25.0104.
Prerequisite or corequisite: V25.0243 or
V25.0341. Laboratory. 2 points.
Provides training in the basic techniques of the organic chemistry laboratory, including crystallization, distillation, extraction, and other separation techniques such as column
chromatography. Experiments
involving the synthesis of organic
compounds are introduced as well as
qualitative organic analysis.
Organic Chemistry II Laboratory
V25.0246 Prerequisite: V25.0245.
Prerequisite or corequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342. Laboratory. 2 points.
Syntheses of organic materials are
covered. An extensive research project
is conducted in the second half of the
semester. The use of IR and NMR
spectroscopy is explored.
Organic Chemistry I (Honors)
V25.0341 Prerequisites: V25.0110 or
V25.0102 and permission of the department. Corequisite: V25.0245. 4 points.
Using a different text, covers material similar to V25.0243, except in
greater depth. Emphasizes the theory
and structures of covalent bonded
materials and develops greater
insight into reaction mechanisms
plus the challenges and creativity
leading to scientific discovery.
Organic Chemistry II (Honors)
V25.0342 Prerequisites: V25.0341
and permission of the department. Corequisite: V25.0246. 4 points.
A continuation of V25.0341. Similar
to V25.0244, except in greater
depth. In this second semester
emphasis is placed on oxygenbearing functional groups such as
ketones, acids, acid derivatives, and
their importance in forming carbon
to carbon bonds. Chemistry of
amines is intertwined. These topics
are further extended to polyfunctional compounds such as carbohydrates
and amino acids.
Organic Chemistry III
V25.0382 Prerequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342 with a grade of B or better.
Offered in the spring semester. 4 points.
In this advanced course, topics missing or only superficially covered in
Organic Chemistry II (including
Honors Organic II) are discussed in
greater depth to provide an insight
into factors governing reactivity of
organic molecules and mechanisms
of organic reactions. Specific topics
vary from year to year; may include
molecular orbital theory, electrocyclic
reactions, photochemistry, free radical chemistry, natural products,
bioorganic chemistry, and organic
synthesis.
Physical Chemistry I
V25.0651 Prerequisites: V25.0102 or
V25.0110, V63.0122 or V63.0222,
two semesters of physics with grades of C
or better, and a 2.0 average in all prior
chemistry requirements. V63.0123 is
strongly recommended but not required.
4 points.
Detailed study of the properties of
gases (ideal and real), chemical thermodynamics, statistical thermodynamics, and chemical kinetics.
CHEMISTRY
•
57
Physical Chemistry II
V25.0652 Prerequisite: V25.0651
with a grade of C or better. 4 points.
Continuation of V25.0651. Introduction to quantum chemistry and
applications to atomic and molecular
structure. Principles of rotational,
vibrational, electronic, and nuclear
resonance spectroscopy. Applications
to studies of molecular properties.
Physical Chemistry III
V25.0657 Prerequisite: V25.0652
with a grade of C or better. 4 points.
Topics include statistical thermodynamics and partition functions; intermolecular forces and electric and
magnetic properties of molecules;
molecular motion in liquids and
gases; kinetics as applied to chain
reactions, photochemical reactions,
catalysis and collision, and activated
complex theory; and colligative properties, sedimentation, viscosity, and
light scattering.
Experimental Methods
V25.0661 Prerequisite: V25.0104.
Prerequisite or corequisite: V25.0652.
Laboratory and lecture. 4 points.
Introduction to the principles and
practices of experimental methods
widely used in analytical and
research laboratories. Emphasizes
understanding of the capabilities
and limitations of the methods as
well as the interpretation of data.
Covers instrumental methods, such
as UV/visible spectroscopy, FT-IR,
NMR, and fluorescence, for the
systematic characterization of
compounds and the use of microcomputers for data collection and
spreadsheet analysis. Studies also
include an introduction to computer
modeling of molecular properties.
Electronics for Scientists
V25.0671 Identical to V23.0110 and
V85.0110. Prerequisite: V85.0012,
V85.0093, or permission of instructor.
Lecture and laboratory. 5 points.
See description under Physics (85).
Inorganic Chemistry
V25.0711 Prerequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342 with a grade of B or better.
4 points.
Studies of methods in inorganic
chemistry that make use of symmetry to describe bonding and spectra
of inorganic compounds. Reactions
and kinetics are also discussed for
inorganic, organometallic, and
bioinorganic compounds. Selected
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CHEMISTRY
topics in main group chemistry are
also included.
Advanced Organic/Inorganic
Laboratory
V25.0731 Prerequisite: V25.0246
with a grade of B or better, or permission
of the instructor. 4 points.
Advanced laboratory emphasizing
techniques commonly used in
synthetic inorganic and organic
chemistry research. Instruction in
techniques such as gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, cyclic
voltammetry, polarimetry, circular
dichroism, air-sensitive techniques,
and thin-layer, column, and high
pressure liquid chromatography.
Chemical Dynamics
V25.0741 Formerly Advanced Physical
Chemistry. Prerequisite: V25.0652.
4 points.
Covers three areas in modern physical chemistry. The first part reviews
equilibrium thermodynamics,
including basic laws of thermodynamics and their applications. The
second part concentrates on the theory of molecular structure and spectroscopy. The basic principle of quantum mechanics is introduced with its
application to molecular structure.
The third part discusses chemical
kinetics, theory of reaction rates, and
reaction dynamics in gas-phase and
gas-surface.
Biological Chemistry
V25.0868 Prerequisite: V25.0240.
Not open to chemistry majors. Intended
primarily for students in the Steinhardt
School of Education. Laboratory and lecture. 5 points.
Study of the four classes of biomolecules—carbohydrates, lipids, proteins,
and nucleic acids. Topics also include
pH and buffers, biosynthesis of proteins, properties of enzymes, and
metabolic pathways involved in production of energy. Laboratory experiments outline the preparation and
study of buffers, analysis of amino
acids, proteins, carbohydrates, and
lipids. Importance of biochemistry in
everyday life is also surveyed with
experiments concerning smoking,
analgesic medicines, and vitamin C.
Organic Reactions
V25.0911 Prerequisites: V25.0244 or
V25.0342, and V25.0652. 4 points.
Survey of the major classes of organic
reactions, reagents, mechanisms,
stereochemistry, and protecting
groups. Discusses origins of chemoselectivity, regioselectivity, stereoselectivity, and the planning of organic
synthesis.
Structure and Theory in Organic
Chemistry
V25.0913 Prerequisites: V25.0244 or
V25.0342, and V25.0652. 4 points.
Stereochemical aspects of bonding in
organic molecules. Conformational
analyses. Thermodynamic and kinetic methods. Techniques for studying
organic mechanisms and reactive
intermediates and their applications
to substitution, addition, and elimination reactions.
Molecular Modeling and Spectra
V25.0926 Prerequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342. 4 points.
Modern topics in organic chemistry
are explored using computational
tools. Three-dimensional structural
models are studied: molecular
mechanics, semi-empirical, and ab
initio methods. The course goes
beyond molecular modeling to
include Web-based chemistry databases and physical property and spectral calculations.
The Contemporary Chemist
V25.0942 Open only to chemistry or
biochemistry majors. 2 points.
The nontechnical aspects of chemistry are considered through careers,
chemical literature, history, and societal interactions. Careers in research,
teaching, medicine, business, and law
are examined as end products of
chemical training. Chemical literature is surveyed with emphases on
chemical abstracts, Beilstein,
Gmelin, and landmarks of science.
Impacts of chemistry on modern history such as I. G. Farben’s connection
with Auschwitz are explored. Scientific-societal problems such as
Bhopal and Chernobyl are examined
through student presentations.
Tutorial in Chemistry
V25.0993, 0994 Prerequisites: completion of the required core courses for the
major and permission of the department.
May count as an advanced elective
toward the major. Open to chemistry or
biochemistry majors only. 4 points.
In consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies, the student
selects a faculty member to serve as a
tutor for an in-depth exploration of a
specific topic in chemistry. As compared with V25.0995, 0996, 0997,
and 0998, described below, research
is not a necessary component. Discussions with the faculty member
take place weekly, and a paper at the
end of the semester is required.
Senior Honors in Chemistry
V25.0995, 0996 Prerequisites: completion of the required core courses for the
major and permission of the department.
Open only to students who have maintained an overall average of 3.5 in their
course of study and in the courses required
for the chemistry or biochemistry major.
Required for candidates for the degree
with honors. 2-4 points per term.
In consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies, the student
chooses a faculty member to serve as
adviser in an independent program
of research in experimental or theoretical chemistry. The student selects
an adviser in the spring of the junior
year, or earlier, and undertakes the
work that spring, the following summer, and into the senior year. A written progress report at the end of the
fall semester of the senior year is
required. The research is completed
during the spring term and the student presents his/her work at a short
departmental seminar near the end of
the term. Presentation at the Annual
Undergraduate Research Conference
is also required. The research culminates in the writing of a senior thesis
that must be approved by the adviser
and the director of undergraduate
studies.
Advanced Individual Study and
Research
V25.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the department. Open to students
majoring in chemistry or biochemistry
who have maintained an average of 3.0
or better in all departmentally required
courses and who possess the necessary ability to pursue research in a field of chemistry. The research adviser is selected in
consultation with the director of undergraduate studies. Laboratory. 2-4 points
per term.
Individual study in a selected area
tailored to the student’s needs insofar
as is possible. Training is provided in
current research areas. Requires a
written final research report.
GRADUATE COURSES
OPEN TO ADVANCED
UNDERGRADUATES
Graduate courses in chemistry may
be taken for undergraduate credit
with the permission of the director of
undergraduate studies. In addition to
the courses listed below, other 2000level chemistry courses are open to
advanced undergraduates. For further
information, see the director of
undergraduate studies and consult
the Graduate School of Arts and Science
Bulletin.
Strategies in Synthetic Organic
Chemistry
G25.1312 Formerly Advanced Organic
Chemistry II. Prerequisite: V25.0911.
2 points.
A continuation of Advanced Organic
Chemistry I (V25.0911) with an
emphasis on biologically active and
structurally interesting compounds.
Organic Reaction Mechanisms
G25.1314 Prerequisite: V25.0913.
2 points.
Discussion of the mechanisms of
organic reactions including the interrelationship between structure and
mechanism, nucleophilic and free
radical substitution, as well as thermal and photochemical cycloaddition
reactions.
Organic Analysis
G25.1326 Prerequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342 with a grade of B or better or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Emphasizes the application of spectroscopic methods in organic
chemistry in determining molecular
structure, including proton and carbon NMR and infrared and Raman
Spectroscopy.
Biophysical Chemistry
G25.1814 Prerequisites: V25.0244 or
V25.0342, and V25.0652. 4 points.
Applications of physical and chemical principles to topics of biochemical and biological interest. Emphasis
on the basic principles of various biophysical techniques that are used to
study important macromolecules
such as proteins and nucleic acids.
These topics include molecular spectroscopic techniques such as light
absorption, fluorescence, and circular
dichroism, as well as nuclear magnetic resonance and gel electrophoresis. Applications of these methods to
important biophysical and biochemical problems of current interest are
discussed.
Biochemistry I, II
G25.1881, 1882 Identical to
G23.1046, 1047. Prerequisite for
G25.1881: V25.0244 or V25.0342.
Prerequisite for G25.1882: G25.1881.
4 points per term.
Introduction to the chemistry of living cells. Topics include structure
and function of proteins, lipids,
carbohydrates, and nucleic acids;
enzyme structure, mechanism and
regulation of enzyme activity,
membrane structure and transport;
mechanisms of cellular processes and
cellular physiology, including ion
channels and pumps, cell motility,
and the immune response. The second term emphasizes analysis of
metabolic pathways, including glycolysis, electron transport, oxidative
phosphorylation, and mechanisms of
gene regulation.
Experimental Biochemistry
G25.1885 Prerequisite: V25.0244 or
V25.0342; Pre- or corequisite:
G25.1881. Laboratory. 4 points.
Introduction to molecular analysis of
biomolecules. Selected experiments
and instruction in analytical techniques used in biochemical research,
including chromatography, spectrophotometry, and electrophoresis;
isolation and characterization of
selected biomolecules; kinetic analysis of enzymatic activity; analysis of
protein-protein and protein-DNA
interactions that direct basic biochemical pathways.
CHEMISTRY
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59
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Classics (27)
2 5
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Peachin
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Marincola
Faculty
WAV E R LY
P L A C E ,
N E W
Y O R K ,
N Y
1 0 0 0 3 - 6 7 9 0 .
( 2 1 2 )
9 9 8 - 8 5 9 7 .
T
he Department of Classics explores all aspects of the Greek and Roman worlds,
including their languages and literatures, art and archaeology, history, philosophy,
religion, politics, economics, and law. This broad interdisciplinary approach to
these cultures that have had a major role in shaping Western values and thought provides
an excellent undergraduate education, and classics students go on to careers in education,
law, medicine, business, and the media.
The department offers courses both in the original languages and in English translation. Several majors and minors are available, some in conjunction with other departments
(History, Fine Arts, Anthropology, Italian, Medieval and Renaissance Studies, and Comparative Literature) and with the Alexander S. Onassis Program in Hellenic Studies. Academic
internships, an honors program, and individualized study are also available.
Classroom instruction is supplemented by a variety of activities. In addition to lectures and field trips sponsored by a lively Classics Club, students have access to the superb
collections of antiquities at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum, the
American Numismatic Society, and the Pierpont Morgan Library, as well as access to the
department’s own collection of antiquities. Finally, various opportunities for travel and
study abroad are available in Greece, Italy, and other Mediterranean sites.
Professors Emeriti:
Casson, Dilts, Dunmore, Mayerson
Professors:
Bonfante, Mitsis, Peachin,
Santirocco, Sider, Sifakis
Associate Professors:
Lowrie, Marincola, Ratté
Assistant Professor:
Haynes
Program
MAJORS
1. Classics (Latin and ancient
Greek): This major requires a total
of 40 points of course work, to be
selected from the departmental offerings (N.B., courses in modern Greek
do not count toward completion of
this major). The courses to be counted toward the major must include, at
least, either one advanced course in
both ancient Greek and Latin or two
advanced courses in either of these
languages.
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CLASSICS
2. Classical civilization: This
major requires a total of 40 points of
course work, to be selected from the
departmental offerings (N.B., courses
in modern Greek do not count
toward completion of this major).
The courses to be counted toward
the major must include either
ancient Greek or Latin through the
full intermediate level (respectively
V27.0010 or V27.0006, or the
equivalent; N.B., students must
complete at least two language
courses in residence at NYU).
3. Classics and fine arts (with
emphasis on archaeology): This
interdepartmental major requires
two years of college-level ancient
Greek or Latin or the equivalent;
Introduction to Archaeology,
V27.0305; and four 4-point courses
in fine arts (V43.0102, V43.0103,
and two others selected from applicable courses, including those in
Egyptian and Near Eastern art). This
is a flexible major designed to
accommodate special interests and
requirements. Advanced-level cours-
es in practical archaeology may be
taken for credit.
4. Classical civilization and
anthropology: This interdepartmental major may follow one of two
tracks, each requiring 20 points from
the Department of Anthropology
and 20 points from the Department
of Classics. The first track focuses on
archaeology and requires V27.0305
and four other 4-point courses in
classical civilization or languages.
The second track emphasizes cultural
anthropology and classical civilization and requires V27.0143 and four
other 4-point courses in classical civilization or languages. Additional
requirements may be found under
Anthropology (14).
5. Classical civilization and
Hellenic studies: This major offers
the possibility of two different
tracks. Both tracks require a total of
40 points of course work. For a list
of courses in Hellenic studies, see
Alexander S. Onassis Program in Hellenic Studies (56).
TRACK A
Here, students concentrate in classical civilization. The major requires
Courses
CLASSICAL LANGUAGES
LATIN
Elementary Latin I-II
V27.0003-0004 Both terms must be
completed to receive credit toward any
departmental major or minor. 4 points per
term.
Introduction to the essentials of
Latin vocabulary, morphology, and
syntax. Five hours of instruction
weekly, with both oral and written
drills and an emphasis on the ability
to read Latin rather than merely
translate it. The second semester
(V27.0004) introduces the student to
selected readings from standard Latin
authors.
Intensive Elementary Latin
V27.0002 Spring term only. Open to
students with no previous training in
Latin and to others through assignment
by placement test. 6 points.
Completes the equivalent of a year’s
elementary level in one semester.
ancient Greek through the intermediate level (four 4-point courses), two
4-point courses from the offerings in
classical civilization, and four 4point courses offered through the
Alexander S. Onassis Program in
Hellenic studies.
TRACK B
This track requires modern Greek
through the intermediate level (four
4-point courses), two 4-point courses
from the offerings of the Alexander S.
Onassis Program in Hellenic Studies,
and four 4-point courses from the
offerings in classical civilization.
(Note: A student already proficient
through the first- or second-year
level of modern Greek will take two
or four courses in place of the first
and/or second year of modern Greek,
with the consent of the appropriate
faculty.)
MINORS
1. Latin and Greek: This minor
requires 20 points of course work, to
be selected from the offerings of the
department (N.B., courses in modern
Greek and Hellenic studies do not
Intermediate Latin I: Reading
Prose
V27.0005 Prerequisites: V27.00030004 or V27.0002 or equivalent. 4
points.
Teaches second-year students to read
Latin prose through comprehensive
grammar review; emphasis on the
proper techniques for reading (correct
phrase division, the identification of
clauses, and reading in order); and
practice reading at sight. At least one
complete oration by Cicero is read;
other authors may include Cornelius
Nepos, Caesar, Livy, Pliny, or Petronius, at the instructor’s discretion.
Intermediate Latin II: Virgil
V27.0006 Prerequisite: V27.0005 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Writings of the greatest Roman poet,
focusing on the most generally read
portions of his most celebrated poem,
the Aeneid. The meter of the poem is
studied, and the student learns to
read Latin metrically to reflect the
necessary sound for full appreciation
of the writing. Readings in political
and literary history illustrate the set-
count toward completion of this
minor). As part of this minor, students must take either Latin or
ancient Greek at least to the full
intermediate level (V27.0006 or
V27.0010, respectively). At least two
of the required courses in ancient
Greek or Latin must be taken in residence at NYU.
2. Classical civilization: This
minor requires 20 points of course
work, to be selected from the offerings in Latin, ancient Greek, or classical civilization (N.B., courses in
modern Greek and Hellenic studies
do not count toward completion of
this minor).
HONORS PROGRAM
Students may receive a degree with
honors in classics or classical civilization. Honors recognition requires a
3.5 average overall, an average of 3.5
in all classics courses, and a completed honors thesis, which may be written as part of Independent Study,
V27.0997, 0998, for 4 points under
the supervision of a departmental
supervisor. For general requirements,
please see under Honors and Awards.
ting in the Augustan Age in which
the Aeneid was written and enjoyed,
the relationship of the poem to the
other classical epics, and its influence
on the poetry of later times.
Medieval Latin
V27.0824 Prerequisites: V27.00030004 or permission of the instructor. 4
points.
General introduction to the development of medieval Latin prose and
poetry from late antiquity to the
Renaissance. Due attention is paid to
the peculiarities of medieval grammar in order to facilitate the student’s
ability to read fluently and to appreciate the literature in the original.
ANCIENT GREEK
Elementary Ancient Greek I-II
V27.0007-0008 Both terms must be
completed to receive credit toward any
departmental major or minor. 4 points per
term.
Introduction to the complex but
highly beautiful language of ancient
Greece—the language of Homer,
CLASSICS
•
61
Sophocles, Thucydides, and Plato.
Students learn the essentials of
ancient Greek vocabulary, morphology, and syntax. Five hours of instruction weekly, with both oral and written drills and an emphasis on the
ability to read Greek rather than
merely translate it.
Intermediate Ancient Greek I:
Plato
V27.0009 Prerequisites: V27.00070008 or equivalent. 4 points.
Reading of Plato’s Apology and Crito
and selections from the Republic. The
purpose of the course is to develop
facility in reading Attic prose. Supplements readings in Greek with lectures on Socrates and the Platonic
dialogues.
Intermediate Ancient Greek II:
Homer
V27.0010 Prerequisite: V27.0009 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Extensive readings in the Iliad or
Odyssey. Proficiency in scansion is
expected as well as a good command
of Homeric vocabulary. Relevant topics ranging from the Homeric question to problems of oral tradition
through the archaeological evidence
of Bronze Age Greece and Troy are
discussed in class or developed by the
student through oral or written
reports.
ADVANCED LATIN AND
ADVANCED ANCIENT GREEK
Advanced Latin: Epic
V27.0871 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent.4 points.
Extensive readings in Virgil’s Aeneid
and the other epics of Rome, including Lucan’s Bellum Civile and
Lucretius’ De Rerum Natura. Consideration will be given to the growth
and development of Roman epic,
its Greek antecedents, and its relationship to the Romans’ construction
of their past. Study of the development of the Latin hexameter is also
included.
Advanced Latin: Cicero
V27.0872 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Offering extensive readings from the
prose works of Cicero, this course
provides readings in Latin of a selection from Cicero’s speeches, letters,
oratorical works, and philosophical
works. Cicero’s place in the development of Latin literature is also con-
62
•
CLASSICS
sidered, as is the social and political
world of the late Republic that he
inhabited.
Advanced Latin: Lyric and Elegy
V27.0873 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent. 4 points.
This course provides extensive readings from the works of Rome’s greatest lyric and elegiac poets, including
Catullus, Horace, Tibullus, Propertius and Ovid. The various lyric
meters adapted by the Romans are
considered, as is the development of
Latin Love Elegy.
Advanced Latin: Comedy
V27.0874 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent. 4 points.
A selection of plays from those of
Plautus and Terence. The development of Roman comedy, its relationship to Greek New Comedy, and its
social and cultural place in Roman
life will also be discussed. Some facility in Plautine and Terentian meter
will also be expected.
Advanced Latin: Satire
V27.0875 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent. 4 points.
With extensive readings from
Horace’s, Juvenal’s, and Persius’
satires, this class traces the development of the satiric mode from its
earliest beginnings in Rome to its
flowering under the Empire. The
relationship of satire to the social
world of Rome, including its treatment of money, women, political figures, and social climbers, is also
examined.
Advanced Latin: Latin Historians
V27.0876 Prerequisite: V27.0006 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Readings from the three masters of
Roman historiography, Sallust, Livy,
and Tacitus. The course also considers the rise and development of history in Rome, its relationship to
myth, and its narrative structure and
manner.
Advanced Individual Study in
Latin
V27.0891, 0892, 0893, 0894 Prerequisite: permission of the department.
2 or 4 points per term.
Advanced Greek: Archaic Poetry
V27.0971 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Extensive readings from the lyric,
elegiac, and iambic poets of Greece.
The course studies the use of the various lyric forms, the different meters
employed by the archaic poets, and
the social functions of archaic poetry.
Advanced Greek: Greek
Historians
V27.0972 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Readings from the two fifth-century
masters of Greek historiography,
Herodotus and Thucydides. The
course examines the themes, narrative structure, and methodology of
both writers, as well as giving some
consideration to the rise of historywriting in Greece, and its relationship to myth and epic.
Advanced Greek: Drama
V27.0973 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Readings of several plays from
among those of Aeschylus, Sophocles,
and Euripides. Spoken and choral
meter are studied, and the role of
performance, dramaturgy, and the
place of theatre in Athenian society
are also examined.
Advanced Greek: Orators
V27.0974 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Readings of several speeches from the
major Attic orators (Lysias,
Aeschines, and Demosthenes). The
course also examines the role of law
in Athenian society, procedure in the
Athenian courts, and rhetorical education and training.
Advanced Greek: Philosophy
V27.0975 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Readings from the dialogues of Plato
and the major philosophical works of
Aristotle.
Advanced Greek: Hellenistic
Poetry
V27.0976 Prerequisite: V27.0010 or
equivalent. 4 points.
The course offers a selection of various authors (including Callimachus,
Theocritus, and Apollonius) and
genres (pastoral, hymn, epigram,
drinking song) from the Hellenistic
era.
Advanced Individual Study in
Ancient Greek
V27.0991, 0992, 0993, 0994 Prerequisite: permission of the department.
2 or 4 points per term.
CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION
INTRODUCTORY COURSES
Civilization of Greece and Rome
V27.0303 4 points.
Selections from some of the great
works of Greco-Roman literature,
considered in their historical context,
provide a broad and multifaceted
understanding of those cultures. The
texts include Homer, Iliad and
Odyssey; Herodotus, The Histories;
Thucydides, Peloponnesian War;
Aeschylus, Oresteia; selected plays of
Sophocles and Aristophanes; Plato,
Republic; Lucretius, On the Nature of
the Universe; and Virgil, Aeneid.
Classical Mythology
V27.0404 Identical to V90.0404.
4 points.
Discusses the myths and legends of
Greek and Roman mythology and
the gods, demigods, heroes, nymphs,
monsters, and everyday mortals who
played out their parts in this mythology. Begins with creation, as vividly
described by Hesiod in the Theogony,
and ends with the great Trojan War
and the return of the Greek heroes,
especially Odysseus. Roman myth is
also treated, with emphasis on Aeneas
and the foundation legends of Rome.
Etymology
V27.0023 Identical to V61.0076.
4 points.
See description under Linguistics
(61).
LITERATURE
Greek Drama: Aeschylus,
Sophocles, and Euripides
V27.0143 Identical to V30.0210.
4 points.
Of the ancient Greeks’ many gifts to
Western culture, one of the most celebrated and influential is the art of
drama. This course covers, through
the best available translations, the
masterpieces of the three great
Athenian dramatists. Analysis of the
place of the plays in the history of
tragedy and the continuing influence
they have had on serious playwrights,
including those of the 20th century.
The Comedies of Greece and
Rome
V27.0144 Identical to V30.0211.
4 points.
Study of early comedy, its form, content, and social and historical background. Covers the Old Comedy of
fifth-century B.C. Athens through
later Attic New Comedy and Roman
comedy. Authors include Aristophanes (all 11 plays, one may be
staged); Euripides, whose tragedies
revolutionized the form of both comedy and tragedy; Menander, whose
plays have only recently been discovered; and Plautus and Terence, whose
works profoundly influenced the
development of comedy in Western
Europe.
Greek and Roman Epic
V27.0146 4 points.
Detailed study of the epic from its
earliest form, as used by Homer, to
its use by the Roman authors. Concentrates on the Iliad and the Odyssey
of Homer and on Virgil’s Aeneid, but
may also cover the Argonautica of the
Alexandrian poet Apollonius of
Rhodes and Ovid’s Metamorphoses, as
well as the epics representative of Silver Latin by Lucan, Silius Italicus,
and Valerius Flaccus.
The Novel in Antiquity
V27.0203 Identical to V29.0203.
4 points.
Survey of Greek and Roman narrative fiction in antiquity, its origins
and development as a literary genre,
and its influence on the tradition of
the novel in Western literature.
Readings include Chariton’s Chaereas
and Callirrhoe, Longus’ Daphnis and
Chloe, Heliodorus’ Ethiopian Tale,
Lucian’s True History, Petronius’
Satyricon, and Apuleius’ Golden Ass.
Concludes with the Gesta Romanorum
and the influence of this tradition on
later prose, such as Elizabethan prose
romance.
Ancient Political Theory
V27.0206 4 points.
Examines the foundation of the
ancient polis (city-state), its ancient
interpretations, and the emergence of
political philosophy with Socrates.
Use of ancient sources. Aeschylus’
Seven Against Thebes illustrates what
the ancients regarded as problems
inherent in political life that, however “solved,” always persisted. Also
includes the Oresteia as the first
example of a solution, Sophocles’
Oedipus Tryannus, Aristophanes’
Knights, Plato’s Republic, Aristotle’s
Politics, and Cicero’s Republic and
Laws.
Ancient Historiography
V27.0207 Identical to V57.0207.
4 points.
Through a close reading of some of
the most important Greek and
Roman historians (Herodotus,
Thucydides, Xenophon, Polybius,
Caesar, Livy, Sallust, and Tacitus),
this class focuses on how the ancients
understood the tasks of the historian.
Topics include the invention of history, narrative and causal analysis,
the relationship between deeds and
speeches, universal versus particular
history, and the perception of history
as literature.
Faces of Sexuality and Gender in
Greece and Rome
V27.0210 4 points.
This class deals with the constructions of gender and experiences of
sexuality in ancient Greece and
Rome. Working with texts and representations from varied discourses
such as medicine, law, literature,
visual art, and philosophy, students
explore the ways in which the ancient
Greeks and Romans perceived their
own bodies in such a way as to differentiate gender and understand desire.
The class also discusses how eroticism
and gender support and subvert
political and social ideologies.
GREEK AND ROMAN
HISTORY
History of Ancient Greece
V27.0242 Identical to V57.0200.
4 points.
Until a few decades ago, Greek history began with Homer and dealt
narrowly with the Greek world.
Thanks to archaeology, the social sciences, and other historical tools, the
chronological and geographical horizons have been pushed back. The
history of the Greeks now starts in
the third millennium B.C. and is connected to the civilization that lay to
the east, rooted in Egypt and
Mesopotamia. Traces Grecian history
from the Greeks’ earliest appearance
to the advent of Alexander.
CLASSICS
•
63
The Greek World from
Alexander to Augustus
V27.0243 Identical to V57.0243.
4 points.
Continuation of the history of
ancient Greece from the age of
Alexander the Great in the fourth
century B.C. until Emperor Augustus
consolidated the Roman hold over
the eastern Mediterranean in the first
century B.C. These three centuries
saw the relationship between Rome
and the Near East become most
meaningful. Examines Alexander’s
conquests, the states established by
his successors (Ptolemies of Egypt
and Seleucids of Syria), and the
increasing intervention of Rome.
with him came a new state religion—Christianity. This course
examines the social and political history of the Roman empire from the
time of Augustus to that of Constantine and also closely observes the parallel growth of Christianity.
The Age of Pericles
V27.0244 4 points.
Discusses the most important political and cultural developments in the
approximately 30 years in which Pericles determined political and cultural life in Athens (ca. 460-430 B.C.) as
well as their roots and their impact.
The subjects addressed include the
introduction of radical democracy,
Athenian imperialism, the rise of historiography, theatrical production,
festivals, art, science, the beginnings
of moral philosophy and political
thought, women’s life, slavery, and
Greek law.
ART AND ARCHAEOLOGY
History of the Roman Republic
V27.0267 Identical to V57.0205.
4 points.
In the sixth century B.C., Rome was
an obscure village. By the end of the
third century B.C., Rome was master
of Italy, and within another 150
years, it dominated almost all of the
Mediterranean world. Then followed
a century of civil war involving some
of the most famous events and
men—Caesar, Pompey, and Cato—in
Western history. The course surveys
this vital period with a modern
research interpretation.
History of the Roman Empire
V27.0278 Identical to V57.0206.
4 points.
In the spring of 44 B.C., Julius Caesar
was murdered by a group of senators
disgruntled with his monarchic
ways. However, Caesar’s adoptive son
and heir, Octavian, was quickly on
the scene and in little more than a
decade managed to establish himself
as Rome’s first emperor. About three
centuries later, Constantine the Great
would rise to imperial power and
64
•
CLASSICS
History of Ancient Law
V27.0292 4 points.
Examines the development of law
and legal systems and the relationships of these to the societies that
created them, starting with some
ancient Near Eastern systems and
working down to the Roman period.
The main focus is on the fully developed system of Roman law.
Introduction to Archaeology
V27.0305 4 points.
Definition of the aims, scope, and
research tools of archaeology. Emphasis on fieldwork and techniques and
the composition and function of an
excavation staff. Special methods or
problems of archaeological exploration (e.g., aerial reconnaissance,
underwater investigations); excavation; and interpretation (carbon 14
and dendrochronology), including
current developments. Covers the
history of archaeology and the chief
archaeological sites and discoveries of
the past century—Lascaux, Ur,
Sakkara, Knossos, Linear B, and
Pompeii.
The Birth of Greek Art: Bronze
Age to Geometric
V27.0311 Identical to V43.0101.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Archaic and Classical Art: Greek
and Etruscan
V27.0312 Identical to V43.0102. 4
points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Hellenistic and Roman Art
V27.0313 Identical to V43.0103. 4
points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Greek Architecture
V27.0353 Identical to V43.0104.
4 points.
A chronological survey of the Greek
architectural tradition from its Iron
Age origins, marked by the construction of the first all-stone temples, to
its radical transformation in the late
Hellenistic period, most distinctively
embodied in the baroque palace
architecture reflected in contemporary theatre stage-buildings. Lectures
(and accompanying slides) and readings present the major monuments
and building types, as well as such
related subjects as city planning and
urbanism, building methods, and
traditions of architectural patronage.
Roman Architecture
V27.0354 Identical to V43.0105.
4 points.
A chronological survey of Roman
architecture from its early development against the background of the
Greek and Etruscan traditions to the
dramatic melding of the divergent
trends of late antiquity in the great
Justinianic churches of Constantinople and Ravenna. The lectures (and
accompanying slides) and readings
present the major monuments and
building types, as well as such related subjects as city-planning and
urbanism, Roman engineering, and
the interaction between Rome and
the provinces.
PHILOSOPHY AND RELIGION
Ancient Religion: From Paganism
to Christianity
V27.0409 Identical to V90.0409.
4 points.
The period from the beginnings of
Greek religion until the spread of
Christianity spans over 2,000 years
and many approaches to religious
and moral issues. Traces developments such as Olympian gods of
Homer and Hesiod; hero worship;
public and private religion; views of
death, the soul, and afterlife; Dionysus; Epicureanism; and Stoicism.
Deals with changes in Greek religion
during the Roman republic and early
empire and the success of Christians
in converting pagans in spite of official persecution.
Greek Thinkers
V27.0700 Identical to V83.0122.
4 points.
The origins of nonmythical speculation among the Greeks and the main
patterns of philosophical thought,
from Thales and other early speculators about the physical nature of the
world through Socrates, Plato, Aristotle, the Stoics, Epicureans, and
Neoplatonists.
SPECIAL COURSES
Special Topics in Classical Studies
I, II
V27.0293, 0294 Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. Usually conducted
in English. 2 or 4 points.
Seminar topics vary from semester to
semester, although the focus is
always on a limited aspect of life,
history, literature, art, or archaeology
of Greco-Roman antiquity. Topics
from past semesters include archaeology and pottery, Alexander the
Great, the Etruscans, and crime and
violence in the ancient world. Future
topics may include Plato and Aristo-
tle, ancient medicine, the age of Pericles, the Age of Augustus, and Latin
love poetry.
Internship
V27.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the department. Open only to
juniors and seniors. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Internships afford students the
opportunity to work outside the
University in areas related to the
field of classics. Institutions such as
the Brooklyn Museum and the
American Numismatic Society offer
such opportunities. Requirements for
completion of the internship include
periodic progress reports and a paper
describing the entire project.
Independent Study
V27.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Courses in classics offered in the
Graduate School of Arts and Science
are open to all undergraduates who
have reached the required advanced
level of Greek or Latin language
instruction.
CLASSICS
•
65
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Comparative Literature (29)
19
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Associate Professor
Ruttenberg
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Vincent
Faculty
UNIVERSITY
PLACE,
YORK,
NY
10003-4556.
(212)
998-8790.
C
omparative literature is an innovative, interdisciplinary major that allows students to
explore literature and literary questions unfettered by national borders and institutional boundaries as well as to understand literature as a unique cultural form
through investigating its relation to other cultural practices. In comparative literature, students develop a multifaceted critical approach that both emphasizes the integrity of literature and expands on the understanding of textuality to include all cultural artifacts and
modes of thought that involve language and representation. The Department of Comparative
Literature encourages students to pursue theoretical and philosophical modes of reading and
to understand the importance of engaging texts in the original language by taking advanced
courses in a national literature and studying the practice of translation. To interrogate how
literature is enmeshed in nonliterary contexts, comparative literature majors develop expertise in relevant related disciplines such as art history, philosophy, history, anthropology, and
cinema studies. Comparative literature departmental course offerings include lecture classes
in world literature and interdisciplinary studies that provide a transition from MAP into the
major and small seminars where students work intensively with a distinguished faculty
composed of scholars in African, Caribbean, Slavic, Latin American, Chinese, and Japanese
areas as well as specialists in the European and Anglo-American traditions.
Erich Maria Remarque Professor
of Languages:
~g~i
Ngu
Professors:
Braithwaite, Chioles, Cohen,
Diawara, Javitch, Reiss, A. Ross,
K. Ross, Sieburth
Program
NEW
The undergraduate major is designed
to foster serious work in literature at
the advanced level, while giving students a strong background in critical
and cultural analysis and a keen ability to pose questions and write with
lucidity and force. The major provides an ideal intellectual site for
•
COMPARATIVE
Assistant Professors:
Abboushi, Calotychos, Dopico,
Vincent
Associated Faculty:
Bishop, Freccero, Molloy, Ronell
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
66
Associate Professors:
Iampolski, Ruttenburg, X. Zhang
students to draw connections across
cultures, periods, genres, and disciplines in a rigorous yet individually
designed way. A comparative literature major could lead to the
advanced study of literature at the
graduate level but could just as readily be a strong basis for advanced
degrees and/or careers in publishing,
journalism, international relations,
international law, cultural studies,
LITERATURE
Affiliated Faculty:
Aching, Affron, Baer, Beaujour,
Feldman, Geulen, Haverkamp,
Hollier, Hüppauf, Kennedy,
Krabbenhoft, Levy, Lockridge,
Meisel, Mikhail, Rudy, Schechner,
Shohat, Sifakis, Stam, Vitz, Yúdice
medicine, philosophy, education,
public policy, film and entertainment industries, the Internet, and
computer software.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Many comparative literature majors
wish to study literature in its international contexts, having mastered
one or more foreign literatures.
However, such mastery is not
required in all courses or of all
majors, and courses are open to a
wide range of nonmajors with eclectic and interdisciplinary interests.
MAJOR
To declare a major, a student must
successfully complete one course
offered by the Department of Comparative Literature. The major has
two tracks, each consisting of ten 4point courses organized as follows:
Track 1: Literature. This track
includes the following courses:
1. Four courses originating in the
Department of Comparative Literature, including one introductorylevel course and one junior seminar
when available. These four courses
must be taught by a faculty member
of the Department of Comparative
Literature; they cannot be cross-listed courses originating in another
department.
2. Four courses in a national literature department at the 100 level or
above conducted in the language of
that literature (including the prerequisite course).
3. Two courses in a related cultural field or discipline. Fields could
include history, art history, religion,
philosophy, classics, politics, cinema
studies, and so on and could also be
Courses
Social Change in the European
Novel from Stendhal to Orwell
V29.0103 4 points.
Studies the novel as a medium
through which social change was
effected in Europe from the 1860s to
the mid-20th century. The authors
are viewed not as forgers of new literary styles or techniques, but rather
as individuals alert to the social scene
of the times in which they lived.
Works by such authors as Stendhal,
Dostoevsky, Eliot, and Pérez Galdós
are discussed.
Evolution of Literary Archetypes
V29.0104 4 points.
Investigates ancient literary archetypes as developed by modern
authors from the 17th century to the
present. While the course emphasizes
the more recent adaptations of such
archetypes as Prometheus, Orestes,
and Hippolytus, it includes the
Greco-Roman origin and transforma-
another foreign language or literary
area. If the national literature department selected for specialization is
English, these two courses must be
in a foreign language. The choice of
these courses will be made in consultation with the adviser to form a
coherent intellectual field and a
defined objective in the major.
Track 2: Literary and Cultural
Studies. Track 2 includes the following requirements:
1. Four courses originating in the
Department of Comparative Literature, including one introductorylevel course and one junior seminar
when available. These four courses
must be taught by a faculty member
of the Department of Comparative
Literature; they cannot be cross-listed courses originating in another
department.
2. Four courses in a related cultural field or discipline. Fields could
include history, art history, religion,
philosophy, classics, politics, cinema
studies, and so on. The choice of
these courses will be made in consultation with the adviser to form a
coherent intellectual field and a
defined objective in the major.
3. Two courses in a foreign literature department in the language of
that literature, normally at the 100
level or above.
tion of different archetypes through
succeeding epochs of Western civilization. Authors include Shakespeare, Racine, Alfieri, Shelley,
Sartre, O’Neill, Gide, Giraudoux,
and Eliot.
The Epic Poem: From Homer to
Milton
V29.0106 4 points.
Study of the development of European epic poetry through a reading
of the Iliad, the Odyssey, the Aeneid,
The Song of Roland, Tasso’s Jerusalem
Delivered, and Milton’s Paradise Lost.
In addition to considering the ways
in which the earlier epics influenced
and shaped the later ones, the course
also pays attention to the different
conceptions of heroism reflected in
each poem.
Tragedy
V29.0110 Identical to V30.0200 and
V41.0720. 4 points.
Historical and critical study of the
MINOR
Four courses originating in the
Department of Comparative Literature (i.e., not cross-listed courses
originating in other departments)
and a demonstrated reading knowledge of one of the foreign literatures
studied in these courses.
ADVISEMENT
The director of undergraduate studies serves as adviser to all comparative literature majors and minors.
HONORS
To receive honors in the major, a student must maintain at least a 3.5
average in the 10 courses required for
the major and must write a senior
honors essay in his or her final
semester. Initial advisement for the
essay is provided by the director of
undergraduate studies, who must be
consulted two terms before that final
semester. The senior honors essay is
then written under the supervision of
a faculty member of the Department
of Comparative Literature whose area
of academic expertise coincides with
the focus of the essay. The senior
honors essay is in addition to the
four courses originating in the
Department of Comparative Literature and the other six courses of the
major.
idea and practice of tragedy from
Greek times to the present.
Comedy
V29.0111 Identical to V41.0725 and
V30.0205. 4 points.
Historical and critical study of comic
forms, themes, and traditions in a
number of Western cultures from
Aristophanes and earlier classical
writing to absurdist and postmodern
notions of comic forms. Provides an
opportunity to study the 20th-century mingling of tragedy and comedy
into the tragicomedy. The aim is to
evolve a critical perspective on comedy for our time. Complements
Department of Classics offerings in
Greek and Roman comedy.
Modernist Fiction
V29.0115 4 points.
Focuses on both formal and thematic
aspects of important innovative
works of fiction from approximately
the first half of the 20th century in
COMPARATIVE
LITERATURE
•
67
Western Europe, the United States,
and Latin America. Authors include
Joyce, Woolf, Gide, Sartre, Mann,
Faulkner, Carpentier, Sábato, and
Rulfo.
Introduction to Comparative
Literature
V29.0116 4 points.
This course is required for all majors
in comparative literature. It explores
the theory of comparative literature
from its inception as a discipline to
the present. Readings vary according
to professor.
Studies in Prose Genres
V29.0125 4 points.
Focuses on prose genres that have
traditionally been relegated to a marginal position in the literary canon
but the status of which is now being
reassessed: the travel account, autobiography, and fantastic fiction. Examining a different genre each time it is
offered, the course also provides students with the opportunity to question what constitutes literature or a
literary genre.
The Postcolonial in African
Literature
V29.0128 Identical to V11.0128.
4 points.
Examines the debate around the concept of the postcolonial. In particular,
looks at specific narratives by African
writers whose works are located in
the period following classical colonialism. Studies the crisis of culture
and issues of personal, class, and
national identities in the global context of neocolonialism. Authors
~g~i wa
include Fanon, Achebe, Ngu
Thiong’o, Nwapa, Ba, and Abrahams.
Topics in Caribbean Literature
V29.0132 Identical to V11.0132 and
V41.0704. 4 points.
Study of the literature and society of
the Caribbean. Emphasizes Anglophone Caribbean within a comparative framework of French/Haitian,
Spanish, Dutch, and Surinamese
Caribbean modes. Topics vary yearly,
from a concentration on Caribbean
poetry to other cultural forms and
presentations. Readings of literature,
history, and political theory supplemented with performance, music,
film, and video. Subjects include
women writers, orality, novels of childhood, and pioneer literary figures.
68
•
COMPARATIVE
Topics in Popular Culture
V29.0136 4 points.
Addresses topics in modern and contemporary popular culture. Topics
vary yearly and may include the
detective novel, television, popular
music, folklore, visual culture, and
romantic fiction.
Literatures, Tricksters, and
Cultural Exchange
V29.0137 4 points.
The history and functioning of the
trickster figure in texts and oral tales
of various cultures. The trickster’s
presentation of a tension between
different norms of rationality. Relations of languages, reasons, and hegemonies. Cultural crossovers, usings,
and borrowings. Texts from contemporary Native America (Blue Cloud,
Silko, and Vizenor); ancient Greece
and Rome (Plato, Euripides, and
Plautus); European Renaissance
(pícaro, Tirso, Grimmelshausen, and
Molière); China (Journey to the West);
India (Ramayana); and other moderns (e.g., Azaldúa, Brathwaite,
Brecht, Grass, Hasek, Kingston,
~g~i wa Thiong’o, Paz,
Lorde, Mo, Ngu
Soyinka).
Masterpieces of Renaissance Literature
V29.0151 Identical to V65.0017.
4 points.
Comparative study of major works of
Renaissance literature. Authors
include Erasmus, More, Machiavelli,
Ariosto, Rabelais, Montaigne, Shakespeare, and Cervantes. The new secular view of the world that emerges in
their works and the ways in which
these authors conform to and defy
inherited moral, social, and literary
conventions receive special attention.
Topics in 18th-Century Literature
V29.0175 2 points.
Addresses comparative topics that
can be treated adequately in a 2point course, introducing texts
drawn from several European literatures and organized generically, thematically, or as part of a literary
movement (e.g., the epistolary novel,
utopian literature, theory of the
novel, historiography). Offers practical experience in close critical reading and introduces the generic, thematic, and literary historical
approaches as methodological and
theoretical problems in comparative
literature.
LITERATURE
Topics in 19th-Century Literature
V29.0180 2 or 4 points.
Addresses topics in 19th-century
European literature that are important for comparative study. Topics
vary yearly and may include the following: the double, the image of
Napoleon, detective fiction as a
19th-century genre, and decadence.
Topics in 20th-Century Literature
V29.0190 2 or 4 points.
Addresses topics in 20th-century
European and American literature
that are important for comparative
study. Topics vary yearly and may
include modernism, comparative
postcolonial literature, and contemporary culture.
20th-Century Balkans and
“Balkanization” Through
Literature and Film
V29.0193 4 points.
Addresses the representation of the
20th-century Balkans through crucial literary and cultural texts of the
region. Considers the presentation of,
and the contestation over, a shared
historical past through common and
divergent motifs, myths, and narrative devices. Identity and the role of
violence in delineating similarity and
difference are examined alongside an
investigation of Western aesthetic
and political intervention.
Introduction to Theory
V29.0249 Prerequisite: one literature
course familiarizing student with techniques of close reading. 4 points.
Introduces major reference points in
the theoretical revolution of the past
30 years that have profoundly transformed the profile of literary studies.
Through intensive close readings,
students engage the most influential
works in contemporary literary theory as well as its 19th- and 20th-century philosophical foundations.
Examples of contemporary theory are
drawn from a range of critical movements including structuralism, poststructuralism, psychoanalytic criticism, Marxist criticism, cultural
studies, ethnic studies, feminist theory, and queer theory.
Film and the Novel: Questions of
Genre and Narrativity
V29.0255 Prerequisite: introductory
course in film or literature. 4 points.
Study of narrative focusing on the
relation between narrative practices
in the novel and in film. Works
studied include theoretical texts and
novels and films exemplifying crucial
narrative paradigms.
Topics in Film and Literature:
The Street in Film and Literature
V29.0300 Identical to V11.0302.
4 points.
Uses the tools of cultural studies to
investigate cultural intersections of
the modern period. Focus on the
street in literature and film includes
questions of cultural space, race,
identity politics, gender, and territoriality in the metropolis. Represents
cultural studies, film studies, black
studies, and women’s studies.
Comparative Imperialisms
V29.0811 Identical to V77.0715.
4 points.
The course explores the interaction
between expansion and cultural production within the global context. It
traces the literary and cultural transpositions between the New World,
Europe, and the Near East with
emphasis on the differences and contests between imperial cultures north
and south. Materials draw on American, English, French, and Arabic lit-
erature, travel narrative, historical
sources, domestics tracts, cultural
criticism, and film. Topics include
domestic ideologies and imperialism;
race, sexuality, and passing; terms of
cultural renewal and extinction; the
North/South divide; and representations of transnational culture.
Women and the Novel
V29.0830 Identical to V97.0830.
4 points.
Examines the contribution of women
writers to the development of the
novel as a genre, asking whether one
can speak of specifically feminine
concerns and strategies of writing in
novels by women. Readings are
selected from European and American women writers from the 17th
through the 20th centuries and
include selections from contemporary
feminist theory.
Readings in Contemporary
Literary Theory
V29.0843 Identical to V41.0735.
4 points.
Introduces students already familiar
with the immanent methods of practical criticism to the most important
movements in contemporary literary
theory. Readings are drawn from
structuralism, poststructuralism,
Marxism, psychoanalysis, feminism,
and new historicism.
Colonialism and the Rise of Modern African Literature
V29.0850 Identical to V41.0707.
4 points.
With the theme of colonialism as the
unifying principle, explores and
compares the work of a number of
African writers of Anglophone, Francophone, and Lusaphone traditions.
Independent Study
V29.0997 Must be approved by the
director of undergraduate studies.
1-4 points.
To write a senior essay as part of the
Honors Program.
Independent Study
V29.0998 Must be approved by the
director of undergraduate studies.
1-4 points.
For special projects, including
internships, contributing to the
major.
COMPARATIVE
LITERATURE
•
69
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Computer Science (22)
2 5 1 M E R C E R S T R E E T, N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 1 2 - 1 1 8 5 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 3 0 1 0 . W W W. C S . N Y U . E D U .
DIRECTOR, COURANT
INSTITUTE OF
MATHEMATICAL SCIENCES:
Professor McLaughlin
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Wright
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Professor Overton
Faculty
Program
C
omputer science is an academic discipline rooted in mathematics as well as a practical art underlying innovation in business, science, economics, graphic design,
communications, government, and education. The value of a computer science
degree in a liberal arts program is consistently growing due to demand for graduates with
both general knowledge and specialized skills.
The department offers a computer science major, a computer science minor, and a
minor in computer applications. The goal of the major is to train students in fundamental
principles of computer science as well as many practical aspects of software development.
The goal of the minors is to train students to be proficient users of computers and computer software with less emphasis on mathematical tools. Courses combine practical programming experience with techniques for analyzing problems and designing computer
algorithms.
Advanced undergraduate students can work on a variety of research projects with
the faculty. Outstanding undergraduates may pursue a master’s degree through an accelerated five-year program.
Professors:
Berger, Cole, Dewar, Gottlieb,
Grishman, Kedem, Mishra,
Overton, Perlin, Pnueli, Pollack,
Schonberg, Schwartz, Shasha,
Spencer, Terzopoulos, Widlund,
Wright, Yap
MAJOR (BACHELOR OF
ARTS)
sequence. If they begin the major
sequence in their freshman year, they
will have time to take additional
electives in computer science before
graduating in four years. Prospective
majors must begin the major
sequence (V22.0101) by the first
semester of their sophomore year in
order to complete the major requirements in three years. Students wishing to major or minor in computer
science must fulfill the prerequisite,
V22.0002, before taking V22.0101.
For students with previous programming experience, V22.0002 may be
waived by taking a placement exam
Requirements include the following
computer science courses: V22.0101,
V22.0102, V22.0201, V22.0202,
and V22.0310; the following mathematics courses: V63.0120 and
V63.0121; and five elective courses
selected from the following:
V63.0122, V63.0124, or computer
science courses listed at the
V22.0400 level. A grade of C (2.0)
or better is necessary in all courses
used to fulfill the major requirements. Students are required to take
V22.0101 through V22.0202 in
70
•
COMPUTER
Associate Professors:
Davis, Geiger, Goldberg, Shoup,
Siegel
SCIENCE
Assistant Professors:
Dodis, Karamcheti, Mazieres,
Melamed, Zorin
Lecturers:
Hull, Marateck
given by the department. Prospective majors should visit the undergraduate department in Warren
Weaver Hall during the fall semester
of their freshman year and should
declare the major after successfully
completing V22.0101.
The following is a recommended
program of study for the B.A. in
computer science: First year of major,
fall term: V22.0101, V63.0121;
spring term: V22.0102, V63.0120.
Second year of major, fall term:
V22.0201, V22.0310; spring term:
V22.0202, one elective (not requiring V22.0202 as a prerequisite).
Third year of major, fall term: two
electives; spring term: two electives.
JOINT MAJOR IN COMPUTER
SCIENCE AND ECONOMICS
This is an interdisciplinary major
offered by the Department of Computer Science (22) with the Department of Economics (31). There are
requirements in three departments,
including mathematics. A grade of C
or better is necessary in all courses.
The mathematics requirements
are V63.0120, V63.0121, V62.0122,
and V63.0123.
The computer science requirements are V22.0101, V22.0102,
V22.0201, V22.0202, V22.0310,
and four computer science electives
numbered V22.0400 or higher. One
of these electives may be replaced by
any one of V63.0124, V31.0310,
V31.0337, V31.0365, V31.0375.
The economics requirements are
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0011,
V31.0013, V31.0020, V31.0266,
plus any three economics elective
courses, at least two of which must
be numbered V31.0300 to
V31.0399.
One of these electives may be
replaced by V22.0444.
JOINT MAJOR IN
COMPUTER SCIENCE AND
MATHEMATICS
This is an interdisciplinary major
offered by the Department of Mathematics (63) and the Department of
Computer Science (22). The computer science requirements are V22.0101,
Courses
COMPUTER FACILITIES
V22.0102, V22.0201, V22.0202,
V22.0310, V22.0421, and two computer science courses listed at the
V22.0400 level. The mathematics
requirements are ten 4-point courses
from the Department of Mathematics, numbered V63.0120 or higher,
that must include either V63.0325
or V63.0343.
MINORS
1. Minor in computer science:
V22.0101, V22.0102, V22.0201,
and V63.0121.
2. Joint minor in computer science and mathematics: V22.0101,
V22.0102, V63.0121, and V63.0122.
3. Minor in computer applications: any four courses offered by the
Department of Computer Science,
such as V22.0002, V22.0004,
V22.0005, V22.0051, and V22.0380.
B.S./B.E. PROGRAM
The department offers a joint fiveyear B.S./B.E. program with Stevens
Institute of Technology. Students
receive the B.S. degree in computer
science from New York University
and the B.E. degree in computer science engineering, electrical engineering, or mechanical engineering from
Stevens. Further information about
the program is available from Joseph
Hemmes and Aara Menzi in the College Advising Center, Silver Center,
100 Washington Square East, Room
905; (212) 998-8130.
INTRODUCTORY COURSES
FOR NONMAJORS
programs using a high level programming language.
Introduction to Computers and
Programming
V22.0002 Prerequisite: three years of
high school mathematics or equivalent.
No prior computing experience is presumed. Students who have taken
V22.0101 will not receive credit. Note:
This course is intended for potential computer science majors who do not have programming experience, as a prerequisite to
V22.0101, as well as for non-computer
science majors. 4 points.
Elementary introduction to programming and computers. The characteristics of computers are discussed and
students design, code, and debug
Computers in Principle and
Practice
V22.0004 Prerequisite: three years of
high school mathematics or equivalent.
No prior computing experience is presumed. 4 points. Students with computing
experience should consult with the computer science department before registering.
The principles part of the course
introduces basic design principles
underlying a computer, e.g., the difference between hardware and software and the interface between the
two. The practical component of the
course seeks to enable students to use
computers as a tool, no matter what
discipline they study, introducing
The Department of Computer Science has access to a variety of computers for both research and instructional use. The main computers for
instructional use are PCs and Macs.
Upper-level courses also use a variety
of other computers, including Sun
workstations. Most instructional
facilities are operated by Information
Technology Services (ITS), and students should review ITS bulletins for
complete information on services,
hours of operation, and conditions of
access. The Department of Computer
Science also has its own network of
Sun workstations, primarily used for
research purposes. The department
operates research laboratories for
experimental computer science
research in programming languages,
distributed computing, computer
vision, multimedia, and natural language processing; most are located at
715 and 719 Broadway. Selected
undergraduates assist in work on
these areas at this facility.
HONORS PROGRAM
A degree in computer science is
awarded with honors to selected
majors who successfully complete the
requirements of the honors program.
Further information is available in
Warren Weaver Hall, 251 Mercer
Street, Room 404 and on the computer science Web page:
www.cs.nyu.edu.
them to word processing, graphics,
spreadsheets, databases, and the
World Wide Web.
Computers in Principles and
Practice II
V22.0005 Prerequisites: V22.0004
and one semester of programming in Pascal or C or equivalent programming experience. Offered in the spring term only
4 points.
Students examine the latest Web
techniques from creating graphics to
writing programs using HTML,
Photoshop, Macromind Director,
JavaScript, and others. Since the
technology of the Web is constantly
changing, new tools and techniques
are introduced as they evolve.
COMPUTER
SCIENCE
•
71
Fundamentals of Computer Science for Nonmajors
V22.0051 Prerequisite: three years of
high school mathematics or equivalent.
4 points.
This course provides an introduction
to computer programming and computer science for students with little
or no programming experience. Students learn the basic principles of
programming and discover how to
solve problems by writing and
debugging computer programs. This
course is not intended for computer
science majors. It is intended primarily for students majoring in other scientific disciplines, in information
systems (Stern), or in the joint engineering program. This course is more
advanced than V22.0002, but less
advanced than V22.0101.
Topics of General Computing
Interest
V22.0380 Prerequisite: topics determine
prerequisites. 4 points.
Detailed descriptions available when
topics are announced. Typical offerings include Introduction to Multimedia and Database and Web Programming. Note: This course cannot
be used as credit toward the major
sequence.
MAJOR COURSES
Introduction to Computer
Science I
V22.0101 Prerequisite: V22.0002 or
departmental permission assessed by placement exam. Offered in the fall term only.
4 points.
How to design algorithms to solve
problems and how to translate these
algorithms into working computer
programs. Experience is acquired
through programming projects in a
high-level programming language.
Intended primarily as a first course
for computer science majors but is
also suitable for students of other scientific disciplines. Programming
assignments.
Introduction to Computer
Science II
V22.0102 Prerequisite: V22.0101.
Offered in the spring term only. 4 points.
Use and design of data structures,
which organize information in computer memory. Stacks, queues, linked
lists, binary trees: how to implement
them in a high-level language, how
to analyze their effect on algorithm
72
•
COMPUTER
efficiency, and how to modify them.
Programming assignments.
Computer System Organization I
V22.0201 Prerequisite: V22.0102.
Offered in the fall term only. 4 points.
This course covers the internal structure of computers, machine (assembly) language programming, and the
use of pointers in high-level languages. Topics include the logical
design of computers, computer architecture, the internal representation of
data, instruction sets, and addressing
logic, as well as pointers, structures,
and other features of high-level languages that relate to assembly language. Programming assignments
are both in assembly language and in
other languages.
Computer System Organization II
V22.0202 Prerequisite: V22.0201.
Offered in the spring term only. 4 points.
Covers the principles and design of
operating systems. Topics include
process scheduling and synchronization, deadlocks, memory management including virtual memory,
input-output, and file systems. Programming assignments.
Basic Algorithms
V22.0310 Prerequisites: V22.0102
and V63.0120. 4 points.
Introduction to the study of algorithms. Presents two main themes:
designing appropriate data structures
and analyzing the efficiency of the
algorithms that use them. Algorithms studied include sorting,
searching, graph algorithms, and
maintaining dynamic data structures.
Homework assignments, not necessarily involving programming.
Numerical Computing
V22.0421 Prerequisite: V63.0124.
Corequisite: V22.0202. 4 points.
Introduction to numerical computation: the need for floating-point
arithmetic, the IEEE floating-point
standard. Importance of numerical
computing in a wide variety of scientific applications. Fundamental types
of numerical algorithms: direct
methods (e.g., for systems of linear
equations), iterative methods (e.g.,
for a nonlinear equation), and discretization methods (e.g., for a differential equation). Numerical errors:
How can you tell if you can trust
your answers? The use of graphics
and software packages such as Matlab. Programming assignments.
SCIENCE
Computer Architecture
V22.0436 Prerequisites: V22.0201
and V63.0120. 4 points.
A first course in the structure and
design of computer systems. Basic
logic modules and arithmetic circuits. Control unit design of computers and structure of a simple processor; speed-up techniques. Storage
technologies and structure of memory hierarchies; error detection and
correction. Input-output structures,
busses, programmed data transfer,
interrupts, DMA, and microprocessors. Discussion of various computer
architectures; stack, pipeline, and
parallel machines; and multiple functional units.
Introduction to Database Systems
V22.0444 Prerequisites: V22.0201
and V22.0310. 4 points.
Database is one of the major application areas of computer science. Organization, storage, and retrieval of
large bodies of relatively uniform or
structured data. How data is physically stored in the computer. A quick
introduction is given to some useful
data structure techniques for common database operations. The main
part of the course studies the three
main “models of data”—the relational model, the network model, and
the hierarchical model. Emphasis is
on the relational model, which is
conceptually simple but powerful.
Introduction to the Theory of
Computation
V22.0453 Prerequisite: V22.0310.
4 points.
This course takes a mathematical
approach in studying topics in computer science, such as regular languages and some of their representations (deterministic finite automata,
nondeterministic finite automata,
regular expressions) and proof of nonregularity. Context-free languages
and pushdown automata; proofs that
languages are not context free. Elements of computability theory. Brief
introduction to NP-completeness.
Object-Oriented Programming
V22.0470 Prerequisite: V22.0202.
4 points.
Object-oriented programming has
emerged as a significant software
development methodology. This
course introduces the important concepts of object-oriented design and
languages, including code reuse, data
abstraction, inheritance, and dynamic
overloading. It covers in depth those
features of Java and C++ that support object-oriented programming
and gives an overview of other
object-oriented languages of interest.
Significant programming assignments stressing object-oriented
design are given.
Software Engineering
V22.0474 Prerequisite: V22.0202 or
permission of department. 4 points.
An intense hands-on study of practical techniques and methods of software engineering. Topics include
advanced object-oriented design,
design patterns, refactoring, code
optimization, universal modeling
language, threading, user interface
design, enterprise application development, and development tools. All
topics are integrated and applied
during the semester-long group project. The aim of the project is to prepare students for dynamics in a real
workplace. Members of the group
meet on a regular basis to discuss the
project and to assign individual
tasks. Students are judged primarily
on the final project presentations.
Distributed Storage Systems
V22.0477 Prerequisite: V22.0202 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
This class examines file system
implementation, low-level database
storage techniques, and distributed
programming. Lectures cover basic
file system structures, journaling and
logging, I/O systems performance,
RAID (redundant arrays of inexpensive disks), the remote procedure call
abstraction, and numerous systems
illustrating these concepts. Programming assignments make the topics
concrete. In a final project, students
build a real, functioning Unix file
system. Topics: file systems, distributed computing, replication and consistency, fault-tolerance, crash recovery. Students have access to dedicated
equipment for the assignments and
project.
Special Topics in Computer
Science
V22.0480 Topics determine prerequisites. 4 points.
Covers topics in computer science at
an advanced level. Detailed course
descriptions are available when topics are announced. Typical offerings
include, but are not limited to,
Computer Graphics, Applied Internet Technology, Network Programming, Computer Vision, Unix Tools,
and Multimedia for Majors.
course descriptions are available
when topics are announced.
Independent Study
V22.0997, 0998 Does not satisfy
major elective requirement. 2-4 points per
term.
Students majoring in the department
are permitted to work on an individual basis under the supervision of a
member of the department if they
have maintained a general average of
3.0 and an average of 3.5 in computer science and if, in the opinion of
the department, they have the ability
and the need for work in topics not
included in the listed courses. Students are expected to spend about
three to six hours a week on assigned
projects.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Special Topics in Programming
Languages
V22.0490 Prerequisite: V22.0201
plus others determined by topic. 4 points.
Covers topics in programming languages at an advanced level. Detailed
A limited number of graduate courses are open to undergraduate students who have maintained an average of 3.5 or better in computer science, subject to permission of the
director of undergraduate studies.
These may be reserved for graduate
credit if the student is pursuing the
accelerated master’s program or substituted for undergraduate elective
credit. Consult the current Graduate
School of Arts and Science Bulletin.
COMPUTER
SCIENCE
•
73
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Dramatic Literature, Theatre
History, and the Cinema (30)
19 UNIVERSITY PLACE, NEW YORK, NY 10003-4556. (212) 998-8800.
W W W. N Y U . E D U / F A S / D R A M A L I T.
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Guillory
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Harries
Faculty
Program
D
rama, a universal and essential art form, provides a fitting focus of study in a liberal arts education. The special opportunities provided by New York as a world
theatre center make the study of dramatic literature at NYU vital and intimately
connected to other arts and disciplines. The department brings together courses from the
entire University in dramatic literature, theatre production, playwriting, and cinema. To all
undergraduates, it offers survey courses in the theory and history of drama as well as electives in more specific subjects. To the major, the department offers a coherent program of
study centered on the history of dramatic literature from its origins to the contemporary
New York dramatic scene. Majors supplement the study of dramatic literature with courses in theatre production, writing, and cinema.
An honors program is available for qualified students, and the department also
offers course credit for internships that allow them to apply their knowledge of dramatic literature and the theatre in a professional setting.
Professors:
Chaudhuri, Gilman, Guillory
Adjunct Professors:
Horwich, Oliver, Osburn
Assistant Professor:
Harries
Affiliated Faculty:
Affron, R. Allen (TSOA), Bishop,
Chioles, Diawara, Lant (TSOA),
Michelson (TSOA), Miller (TSOA),
MAJOR
MINOR IN DRAMATIC
LITERATURE
A minimum of 10 4-point courses
within the department, including
V30.0130 and V30.0110, 0111; two
courses in dramatic literature before
1700; two courses in dramatic literature after 1700; one course in cinema; one course in theatre production,
playwriting, or drama in performance; and one other advanced elective. Transfer students must complete at least five of the 10 courses at
the College. Note: C- is the lowest
grade that may be counted toward
the major provided that the overall
average in dramatic literature courses, including the C- course, is C or
above.
74
•
DRAMATIC
Reiss, Sifakis, Simon (TSOA), Sklar
(TSOA), Stam (TSOA), Straayer
(TSOA), L. Swortzell (The Steinhardt School of Education), N.
Swortzell (The Steinhardt School of
Education)
Any four V30 courses offered by the
department. Only one of the four
may be in theatre production, playwriting, or cinema. Transfer students
must complete at least two of the
four courses at the College. Note: Cis the lowest grade that may be
counted toward the minor provided
that the overall average in dramatic
literature courses, including the Ccourse, is C or above.
studies courses cross-listed under
dramatic literature (V30). Courses
used to satisfy the cinema studies
minor may not be used to satisfy the
requirements of any other major or
minor simultaneously. Transfer students must complete at least two of
the four courses at the College.
Note: C- is the lowest grade that
may be counted toward the minor
provided that the overall average in
cinema studies courses, including the
C- course, is C or above.
MINOR IN CINEMA STUDIES
HONORS
Four courses: Expressive Cultures:
Film (V55.0750), plus three cinema
LITERATURE,
THEATRE
The department offers an honors
program for majors in their junior
and senior years. The program con-
H I S T O RY,
AND
THE
CINEMA
Courses
sists of two courses, a Junior Honors
Seminar, V30.0905, and a Senior
Honors Thesis, V30.0925. The honors thesis counts as an 11th course in
the major. Interested majors should
apply to the director of undergraduate studies.
INFORMATION AND
ADVISEMENT
Note: Majors and minors must register under the V30 number for the
courses listed below. Fulfillment of
the College’s expository writing
requirement is a prerequisite to all
dramatic literature courses.
ADVANCED ELECTIVES IN
DRAMATIC LITERATURE
SURVEY COURSES IN
THEORY AND DRAMATIC
LITERATURE
History of Drama and Theatre
V30.0110, 0111 Identical to
V41.0125, 0126. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Examines selected plays central to the
development of Western drama, with
critical emphasis on a cultural, historical, and theatrical analysis of these
works. The first semester covers the
major periods of Greek and Roman
drama; medieval drama; theatre of
the English, Italian, and Spanish
Renaissance; and French neoclassical
drama. The second semester begins
with English Restoration and 18thcentury comedy and continues
through romanticism, naturalism,
and realism to an examination of
antirealism and the major dramatic
currents of the 20th century.
Theory of Drama
V30.0130 Identical to V41.0130.
4 points.
Explores the relationship between
two kinds of theories: theories of
meaning and theories of performance. Among the theories of meaning to be studied are semiotics,
deconstruction, feminism, psychoanalysis, new historicism, and postmodernism. Theories of practice
include naturalism, dadaism, futurism, epic theatre, theatre of cruelty,
poor theatre, and environmental theatre. Theories are examined through
theoretical essays and representative
plays.
DRAMATIC
Students should consult the department’s undergraduate Web site
(www.nyu.edu/fas/dramalit) at registration time for a list of courses that
satisfy the requirements outlined
above and for more detailed descrip-
Tragedy
V30.0200 Identical to V41.0720 and
V29.0110. 4 points.
Historical and critical study of the
idea and practice of tragedy from
Greek times to the present.
Comedy
V30.0205 Identical to V41.0725 and
V29.0111. 4 points.
Study of comic forms, themes, and
traditions from Aristophanes and
early classical writing to the present.
Greek Drama: Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides
V30.0210 Identical to V27.0143.
4 points.
Of the many gifts of the ancient
Greeks to Western culture, one of
the most celebrated and influential is
the art of drama. This course covers,
by way of the best available translations, the masterpieces of Aeschylus,
Sophocles, and Euripides. The place
of the plays in the history of the
drama and the continuing influence
they have had on serious playwrights,
including those of the 20th century.
Comedies of Greece and Rome
V30.0211 Identical to V27.0144.
4 points.
Study of early comedy, its form, content, and social and historical background. Covers the Old Comedy of
fifth-century Athens through the
Attic New Comedy and Roman
comedy. Authors include Aristophanes (11 comedies are studied, and
one is staged); Euripides, whose
tragedies revolutionized the form of
both comedy and tragedy; Menander,
whose plays were only recently discovered; and Plautus and Terence,
whose works profoundly influenced
comedy in Western Europe.
LITERATURE,
THEATRE
H I S T O RY,
tions of the particular courses offered
in a given term. The director of
undergraduate studies is available
throughout the term as well as during registration periods to discuss
the student’s general education and
career aims as well as the dramatic
literature program.
Shakespeare I, II
V30.0225, 0226 Identical to
V41.0410, 0411. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Introduction to the reading of Shakespeare. Examines about 10 plays each
term, generally in chronological
order. First term: the early comedies,
tragedies, and histories up to Hamlet.
Second term: the later tragedies, the
problem plays, and the romances,
concluding with The Tempest.
Colloquium: Shakespeare
V30.0230 Identical to V41.0415.
Assumes some familiarity with Shakespeare’s works. Beginning students should
take V30.0225, 0226. 4 points.
Explores the richness and variety of
Shakespearean drama through an
emphasis on the mastery of selected
major plays. Six to eight plays are read
intensively and thoroughly examined
in discussion. Assumes some familiarity with Shakespeare’s works.
Restoration and 18th-Century
Drama
V30.0235 Identical to V41.0505.
4 points.
The development of English drama
from 1660 to 1780, illustrating the
comedy of manners; sentimental
comedy and laughing comedy; and
the heroic play and tragedy, both
pathetic and moral. Playwrights
include Dryden, Wycherley, Congreve, Goldsmith, and Sheridan.
Modern British Drama
V30.0245 Identical to V41.0614.
4 points.
Studies in the modern drama of England and Ireland, always focusing on
a specific period, a specific group of
playwrights, a specific dramatic
movement of theatre, or a specific
topic. Among playwrights covered at
different times are Shaw, Synge,
O’Casey, Behan, Osborne, Pinter,
Stoppard, Bond, Friel, Storey, Hare,
Edgar, Brenton, Gems, Churchill,
and Daniels.
AND
THE
CINEMA
•
75
Irish Dramatists
V30.0700 Identical to H28.0603,
V30.0700, and V41.0700. 4 points.
A study of the rich dramatic tradition of Ireland since the days of
William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory,
and the fledgling Abbey Theatre.
Playwrights covered include John
Millington Synge, Sean O’Casey,
Samuel Beckett, Brendan Behan,
Brian Friel, Tom Murphy, Frank
McGuinness, and Anne Devlin.
Issues of Irish identity, history, and
postcoloniality are engaged alongside
an appreciation of the emotional texture, poetic achievements, and theatrical innovations that characterize
this body of dramatic work.
Modern American Drama
V30.0250 Identical to V41.0650.
4 points.
Study of the drama and theatre of
America since 1900, including
Eugene O’Neill, Susan Glaspell, the
Group Theatre, Thornton Wilder,
Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller,
Edward Albee, Adrienne Kennedy,
Amiri Baraka, Sam Shepard, David
Mamet, David Rabe, Arthur Kopit,
August Wilson, George Wolfe,
David Henry Hwang, John Guare,
and Maria Irene Fornes.
African American Drama
V30.0255 Identical to V41.0161.
4 points.
Survey of the major African American dramatists of the past half century. Readings include plays by Lorraine Hansberry, Amiri Baraka, Ed
Bullins, Charles Gordone, James
Walker, Adrienne Kennedy, Ntozake
Shange, Charles Fuller, August
Wilson, George Wolfe, and SuzanLori Parks.
Modern Central European Drama:
From Brecht to Handke
V30.0260 Identical to V51.0081.
Conducted in English. No knowledge of
German is required. 4 points.
Central European drama from the
reaction against expressionism
through the Epic Theatre of Brecht
and Piscator to the documentary and
contemporary drama. Includes
Brecht, Baal, A Man’s a Man, Galileo;
Weiss, Marat/Sade; Dürrenmatt,
Romulus the Great, The Visit; Frisch,
The Firebugs; Kipphard, Oppenheimer;
Handke, Kaspar; H. Müller, Cement;
Ionesco, The Bald Soprano, The Lesson,
The Chairs; E. Bond, Saved; and F. X.
Kroetz, Farm Yard.
76
•
DRAMATIC
Theatre in the French Tradition
V30.0265 Identical to V45.0829.
Conducted in English. 4 points.
Study of the theatrical genre in
France including the Golden Age
playwrights (Corneille, Racine, and
Molière); 18th-century irony and
sentiment; and the 19th-century theatrical revolution. Topics: theories of
comedy and tragedy, development of
stagecraft, romanticism and realism,
the theatre as a public genre, its relationship to taste and fashion, and its
sociopolitical function.
Metaphors of Modern Theatre
V30.0267 Identical to V45.0822.
2 points.
Close reading of contemporary theatre classics, emphasizing their use of
vivid metaphors of the human condition and of the theatre as metaphor
and as artistic process. Analyzes the
plays in detail, thematically and stylistically. Each is seen as a highlight
of nonrealistic theatre—a brilliant
example of the sensibilities of European artists and thinkers in the period just after World War I (Pirandello) to World War II (Sartre) and the
postwar, post-Hiroshima generation
(Beckett).
Contemporary French Theatre
V30.0270 Identical to V45.0821.
Conducted in English. 4 points.
Major figures of contemporary
French drama: Jarry’s Ubu Roi as a
rupture with the past; Claudel as the
heir of the symbolists; Cocteau as
innovator and poet; the theatre of the
imagination, personified by Giraudoux; existentialist theatre in the
works of Anouilh, Camus, and
Sartre; and the theatre of the absurd
in Beckett’s Endgame, Ionesco’s The
Chairs, and Genet’s The Balcony. Concludes with new horizons and future
perspectives—mime, radio, plays,
and scenarios.
Pirandello and the Modern
Italian Theatre
V30.0280 Identical to V59.0274.
4 points.
Development of the modern Italian
theatre from D’Annunzio to Pirandello, on whom attention is especially focused. Pirandello’s masterpieces
are read and discussed, including
Right You Are If You Think You Are,
Liolà, Six Characters in Search of an
Author, and Henry the Fourth. The
impact of Pirandello’s work and theories on the modern theatre in
LITERATURE,
THEATRE
Europe and America. Representative
theatrical works of Ugo Betti, Alberto Moravia, and Diego Fabbri.
García Lorca: Theatre and Poetry
V30.0292 Identical to V95.0761.
Conducted in English. 4 points.
Study of the principal examples of
García Lorca’s theatre and related
poetry and prose. Gypsy Ballads, Poet
in New York, and his complete theatre, including five shorter pieces,
and his three tragedies. Focuses on
those essays in which he seeks to
define his artistic inspiration and the
role of music in the theatre. Attendance at one performance.
ADVANCED ELECTIVES IN
PERFORMANCE CRITICISM
AND WRITING
Drama in Performance in New
York
V30.0300 Identical to V41.0132.
4 points.
Combines the study of drama as literary text with the study of theatre as
its three-dimensional translation
both theoretically and practically.
Drawing on the rich theatrical
resources of New York City, about 12
plays are seen covering classical to
contemporary and traditional to
experimental theatre. Readings
include plays and essays in theory
and criticism.
Writing About Performance
V30.0310 4 points.
Employs workshop methods to
explore various ways of responding to
performance in writing: reviews,
essays, and articles. Regular writing
assignments. Some required visits to
performances in the area.
Advanced Workshop in
Playwriting
V30.0840 Identical to V41.0840.
Enrollment requires permission of the
instructor and is based on submission of
writing samples. Applications and deadline information are available on the
department Web site. 4 points.
Principles and practice of writing for
theatre. Students are expected to
write and rewrite their own plays
and to present them for reading and
criticism.
H I S T O RY,
AND
THE
CINEMA
ELECTIVES IN THEATRE
PRODUCTION
Stagecraft
V30.0635, 0636 Identical to
E17.0009, 0010. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Comprehensive, practical course in
the various technical aspects of theatrical production. First term
explores the planning, construction,
and painting of scenery and the
architecture of the stage. Second
term deals with stage electrics, lighting, crafts, sound technology, and
special effects.
Acting I
V30.0637, 0638 Identical to
E17.0027, 0028. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Class hours are spent in the practice
of improvisation, pantomime, and
theatre games as well as brief scenes.
Additional hours for rehearsal and
performance of scenes.
Acting II
V30.0639, 0640 Identical to
E17.0037, 0038. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Emphasis on scene study and the
analysis and performance of characters. Students may be cast and
rehearsed by members of the directing classes in brief scenes performed
on Friday afternoons and in evenings
of one-act performances, as well as
staff-directed or -supervised, fulllength productions.
Stage Lighting
V30.0641 Identical to E17.1143.
4 points.
Theories of light and lighting. The
practice of lighting the stage. Experiments with light as design.
Costume Design
V30.0642 Identical to E17.1175.
4 points.
Costume design for the modern
stage; the history of fashion.
Directing
V30.0643, 0644 Identical to
E17.1081, 1082. Prerequisites: satisfactory work in V30.0639, 0640, or
equivalent, and permission of adviser.
V30.0643 is a prerequisite for
V30.0644. 4 points per term.
Elements of play scripts are analyzed
and dramatized. Students may cast
and rehearse brief scenes performed
on Friday afternoons.
DRAMATIC
Design for the Stage
V30.0645 Identical to E17.1017.
4 points.
Design for today’s stage in period
and modern styles. Methods of originating and presenting a design conception. Practice in scene sketching.
Styles of Acting and Directing
V30.0646, 0647 Identical to
E17.1099, 1100. 4 points.
Scenes from period plays (Greek,
Roman, Elizabethan, neoclassical
French, Restoration, and 18th- and
19th-century European) are studied
and performed. A course in performance styles and techniques for
those interested in acting, directing,
design, theatre history, and criticism
as well as for teachers of acting and
directing.
Silent Theatre
V30.0648 Identical to E17.1113.
2 points.
Techniques for performing and
teaching pantomime. Training in
body control, gesture, and facial
expressiveness. While basically a performance course, the history of mime
as a theatre art is examined, and significant examples of Eastern and
Western styles are studied.
ELECTIVES IN CINEMA
Film as Literature
V30.0501 Identical to V41.0170.
4 points.
The development of the film as a
major art form and its relationship to
other art forms. Particular attention
to the language of cinema, the director and screenwriter as authors, and
the problems of translating literature
into film, with extensive discussion
of the potentials and limitations of
each art form. Milestone films are
viewed and analyzed.
Cinema in Contemporary Ireland
V30.0503 Identical to V58.0503.
4 points.
An examination of recent developments in Irish cinema focusing on
the importance of independent film
in contemporary Irish culture. Considers the relationship between word
and image, narrative and spectacle,
in light of the complex interaction
between visual culture and the powerful literary tradition in Ireland.
LITERATURE,
THEATRE
H I S T O RY,
Cinema and Literature
V30.0504 Identical to V45.0883.
4 points.
Exposes the student to various
modes, such as expressionism, social
realism, and the projection of the
hero. One film is viewed per week
and analyzed with reading assignments that include novels, plays, and
poems. The objective is to exploit
the potentiality of different media
and to make vivid and intellectual
the climate of Europe on which these
media so often focus.
Italian Cinema and Literature
V30.0505 Identical to V59.0282.
4 points.
Studies the relationship between
Italian literature and post-World
War II cinema. Among the authors
and directors examined are Lampedusa, Bassani, Sciascia, Visconti,
DeSica, and Rosi.
Fascism and Film
V30.0506 Identical to V59.0169.
4 points.
Studies representations of fascism in
postwar Italian cinema. Films by
Rossellini, Cavani, Bertolucci, Visconti, Fellini, Wertmüller, the
Taviani brothers, and others.
The Silent Screen: 1895-1928
V30.0520 Identical to H56.0005.
4 points.
Demonstrates the strength and vitality of the developing language of
cinema. Traces the basic filmic structures from the earliest work of
Lumière and Méliès to the first masterpieces of cinema, including Soviet
film development; the beginnings of
documentary; European expressionism; the masters of the American
cinema; and selected short films by
Chaplin, Léger, Claire, and Buñuel.
Film screening each week, followed
by a lecture and an analysis of the
film’s structural elements.
Hollywood and Its Alternatives:
1929-1949
V30.0521 Identical to H56.0006.
4 points.
Examines the growth of film form
after the coming of sound on a broad
international basis and gives a firsthand familiarity with classics of the
period. The innovations of the sound
film are studied. Examines filmmakers for their contribution to film
style and form: Hawks, Ford, Renoir,
Welles, Sternberg, Lang, Vigo,
AND
THE
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•
77
Rossellini, and Hitchcock. Weekly
small-group discussion sections provide for an exchange of ideas and a
deeper examination into the perceptual and historical aspects of each
film.
Pudovkin) and theoreticians (e.g.,
Arnheim, Bazin, Metz). Refines the
student’s understanding of the theoretical concerns of cinema studies in
its relation to the practice of filmmaking and film criticism.
Film Now: 1950 to the Present
V30.0530 Identical to H56.0007. 4
points.
Survey of film between 1950 and
1980, tracing the roots of current
cinema through the complex development of styles that moved film
toward a more personal statement,
breaking the old conventions of storytelling and seeking to lay bare the
social realities of the time. Directors
include Godard, Truffaut, Hitchcock,
Scorsese, and Altman. Each week, a
small-group discussion probes the
films’ perceptual and historical
aspects.
INTERNSHIP
Film Theory
V30.0531 Identical to H56.0011. 4
points.
Second-level course to introduce the
main schools of film theory focusing
on the question “What is cinema?”
Overview of the basic theories developed by filmmakers (e.g., Eisenstein,
78
•
DRAMATIC
Internship
V30.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. Open to qualified upper-class dramatic literature majors or minors, but may
not be used to fulfill the minimum
requirement of either the major or the
minor. 2 or 4 points per term.
Requires a commitment of eight to
12 hours of work per week in an
unpaid position to be approved by
the director of undergraduate studies.
The intern’s duties on site should
involve some substantive aspect of
work in drama. The student is
expected to fulfill the obligation of
the internship itself, and a written
evaluation is solicited from the outside sponsor at the end. The grade for
the course is based on a final project
submitted to a faculty director with
whom the student has been meeting
regularly over the semester to discuss
the progress of the internship.
LITERATURE,
THEATRE
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V30.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. May not duplicate the content of a
regularly offered course. Intended for
qualified upper-class majors or minors in
this department, but may not be used to
fulfill the minimum requirements of either
the major or the minor. 2 or 4 points.
A paper of considerable length that
should embody the results of a
semester’s reading, thinking, and frequent conferences with the student’s
director. It should show the student’s
ability to investigate, collect, and
evaluate his or her material, finally
drawing conclusions that are discussed in a sound and well-written
argument. In the 2-point course, the
student is held to the same high
standard as is the student who is
working for 4 points, but the investigation and the paper are of proportionate length.
H I S T O RY,
AND
THE
CINEMA
PROGRAM IN
Earth and Environmental
Science (49)
Minor
S I LV E R C E N T E R , 1 0 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, R O O M 1 0 0 9 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 8 .
(212) 998-8200. E-MAIL: [email protected].
ADVISERS IN EARTH
AND ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE:
Associate Professors
Rampino and Volk
The Department of Biology
administers the earth and
environmental science courses
offered by the College.
Courses
I
ntended for students interested in the earth as a natural system and the interaction of
humans with it, the minor complements interests in the humanities, social sciences, and
natural sciences and in education, government, law, and business. Through independent
study, students can pursue specific research interests, knowledge, and skills. Work experience
through an internship with governmental or private organizations can be incorporated into
programs of independent study.
The minor may be satisfied by four courses in the program, but note that approval
from a program adviser is required in selecting them. A maximum of 4 points of independent study in earth and environmental science may be used toward the minor.
Evolution of the Earth
V49.0001 Rampino. 4 points.
The geological and biological history
of the earth. The cosmic context of
earth history; origin of the earth;
major highlights in the development
of the planet; the origin and evolution
of life. Principles and methods by
which we reconstruct earth history.
The Living Environment
V49.0008 Identical to V23.0008.
May not be taken after V23.00110012. Estol. 4 points.
Examines fundamental issues in
environmental science and their relation to life on earth. Covers abiotic
systems, including climate, geology,
and energy cycling as well as biotic
issues, including ecosystems, the origin of life, evolution, and speciation.
Examines the interrelationship of
these systems and their relationship
to humans.
Earth System Science
V49.0010 Rampino. 4 points.
Our current view of the earth as an
integrated system involving dynamic
interactions among the atmosphere,
ocean, solid earth, and life. Emphasizes present earth systems, their evolution, and forecasts for the future.
Topics include new observations of
the earth from space, geophysics and
plate tectonics, circulation of the
oceans and atmosphere, cycles of elements essential for life, coevolution
of climate and life, and current problems (e.g., the greenhouse effect).
Whole Earth Science: The Global
Environment
V49.0012 Volk. 4 points.
In this inquiry-based course, we
“think globally.” For example, we
analyze observational data on atmospheric carbon dioxide and Earth’s
climate. Students then research topics related to the carbon cycle and
eventually consider policy implications of scientific findings in a wide
variety of environmental issues.
Emphasis is on learning by examining and reporting.
Cities and Their Environments
V49.0330 Volk. 4 points.
Examines how environmental knowledge can be used to solve problems
in the planning and development of
cities and their surrounding regions
and how environmental conditions
have influenced their growth. Examples of topics: geology, water supply,
waste disposal, energy sources, recreation, wildlife, hazards, and urban
planning.
EARTH
AND
Continental Drift, Seafloor
Spreading, and Plate Tectonics
V49.0440 Rampino. 4 points.
Examines and appraises the evidence
on which the theories of continental
drift, seafloor spreading, and plate
tectonics are based. Evaluates these
and other theories as possible explanations for the major features of the
earth’s crust. Brings out the historical development of these theories to
provide the student with insight into
the nature and evolution of scientific
thought.
Field Geology
V49.0705 Rampino. 4 points.
Examines various bedrock and surficial features through classroom work
and extensive fieldwork to develop
historical interpretations. Field
observation is done within a 150mile radius of New York City but
emphasizes the metropolitan region.
Limits of the Earth: Issues in
Human Ecology
V49.0875 Hoffert. 4 points.
Examines the array of environmental
problems facing modern society,
including global pollution and
the impact of human population
growth on land-use patterns, earth
resources, energy supply and use, and
ecosystems.
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
•
79
Environmental Science:
Principles and Practice
V49.0880 Identical to V23.0880.
Estol. 4 points.
Basic course for nonscience majors.
Topics include sources of pollution;
routes of human exposure; human
health effects; and effects on local,
regional, and global environments.
Discusses problems in measuring and
modeling inputs and pollutant
movement in the environment as
well as current legislation and regulations. Throughout, the course presents current examples (“case studies”) of environmental problems to
show how the basic principles examined are applied in the real world.
Independent Study in Earth and
Environmental Science
V49.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of an earth and environmental science
adviser. 2 or 4 points per term.
Qualified students engage in directed
study in earth and environmental science under the supervision of one of
the advisers in earth and environmental science.
ADDITIONAL COURSES
The following courses may also be
used to satisfy the minor in earth and
environmental science. See under
Biology (23) for descriptions and prerequisites.
Field Biology and Elements of
Ecology V23.0017
Introduction to Ecology V23.0063
Environmental Science:
Principles and Practice V23.0880
(Cross-listed with V49.0880)
Geological Science G23.1001
Environmental Health G23.1004
Identical to G48.1004.
Toxicology G23.1006 Identical to
G48.1006.
Biotic Resources G23.1073
The Living Environment
V23.0008 (Cross-listed with
V49.0008)
Ecological Botany G23.1075
Earth Biology G23.1201
Field Laboratory in Ecology
V23.0016
80
•
EARTH
AND
ENVIRONMENTAL
SCIENCE
PROGRAM IN
East Asian Studies (33)
7 1 5 B R O A D WA Y, 3 R D F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 8 0 6 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 7 6 2 0 .
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Harootunian
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Masayo Kaneko
Faculty
T
he Department of East Asian Studies offers courses on China, Japan, Korea, and
Vietnam. The focus of the program is primarily on language and literature and the
way in which these four civilizations have interacted with the Western world to
reconstitute received cultures into modern societies. By intensive study of Asian culture, the
student is encouraged to reflect on the global interrelatedness of human society. At present,
three language sequences are offered: a six-semester Chinese language sequence, a six-semester Japanese language sequence, and a six-semester Korean language sequence.
Fourth-year study is also offered in all three languages. In addition, various courses
in Asian culture are offered in the Department of East Asian Studies, while courses in history, politics, and art are available in other departments. Starting with the summer session
of 2000, the program has arranged a series of courses at Nanjing University in China.
The proximity of Chinatown to the College of Arts and Science gives students
access to many cultural events, such as festivals and theatre, that highlight the social background of Asian thought. In New York City, important collections and exhibitions of Asian
art are always available to the interested student.
Professors:
Harootunian, Roberts
Associate Professors:
Yoshimoto, L. Young (History),
X. Zhang (Comparative Literature)
Assistant Professors:
Goswami (History), Karl (History),
Park (Sociology), Vincent (Comparative Literature)
Program
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
The program has two objectives: (1)
to develop a high level of competence in Chinese, Japanese, and
Korean and (2) to introduce students
to the authentic voices of Asian cultures through the study of translated
literary and cultural documents (primarily literature, religion, and philosophy) created within those societies. Moreover, ongoing study of
those cultures is encouraged as a
Affiliated Faculty:
Cornyetz (Gallatin), McKelway (Fine
Arts), Trede (Institute of Fine Arts),
Waley-Cohen (History), M. Young
(History), Z. Zhang (Cinema Studies), Zito (Anthropology, Religious
Studies)
Language Lecturers:
Goto, He, Ikeda, Jiao, Kaneko, Kim,
J. Lee, S. Lee, Shao
means of acquiring a broad comparative perspective and an appreciation
of the human problems common to
all cultures. The courses are offered
through various departments, underscoring the multidisciplinary nature
of the program.
nese, Japanese, or Korean through
the advanced level and four approved
courses from among the College’s
offerings in the geographic area. Elementary levels I and II of these three
languages will not be counted
toward fulfilling the major requirement. Substitutions for the language
courses may be made if a student can
demonstrate equivalent language
competence through a placement
test; credit is not given for placement test results.
MAJOR
The program leads to an East Asian
studies humanities major in either of
two ways:
1. Students may complete Chi-
EAST
Instructors:
Lam, Wang
ASIAN
STUDIES
•
81
2. Students who have already
completed the CAS language
requirement (two years) with either
Chinese, Japanese, or Korean,
through a language placement test or
accredited course work, are required
to complete language study through
the third year (advanced level II) and
may take six nonlanguage courses
related to the geographic region as
defined above.
Although the suggested major
requirements of language combined
with nonlanguage instruction are
strongly recommended and enforced,
in certain cases, a student’s program
can be individually designed in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies. For example, if a
student prefers not to study a language in the program, he or she may
achieve a major by completing eight
nonlanguage courses.
Note: (1) All East Asian studies
majors—as well as students planning
to major in this field—are expected,
prior to commencing their studies in
EAS, to complete one of the following courses in fulfillment of MAP
requirements:
Courses
The courses listed below are intended
to show the range of choices available, but students are not limited to
these courses in fulfilling the major
or minor.
LANGUAGE COURSES
Elementary Chinese I, II
V33.0201, 0202 4 points per term.
Introductory course in modern Chinese using Lin’s College Chinese. Covers both spoken and written aspects
of the language. Open to students
who have had no training in Chinese,
the course includes translation from
and into Chinese and a basic study of
elementary Chinese grammar.
Intermediate Chinese I, II
V33.0203, 0204 Prerequisite:
V33.0202 or the equivalent. 4 points per
term.
A continuing study of Chinese at the
intermediate level. In addition to the
reading of pai-hua (colloquial) texts,
the course provides enough wen-yen
(classical) syntax and vocabulary to
aid in reading contemporary belles
lettres and journalistic and documentary materials in the original.
82
•
EAST
ASIAN
V55.0506 Chinese and Japanese
Traditions
V55.0507 World Cultures: Japan
V55.0512 World Cultures: China
(2) Asian/Pacific/American studies offers several courses, some of
which can be used on a limited basis
toward the completion of an East
Asian studies major or minor. These
cross-listings are determined on a
semester-by-semester basis.
(3) Cantonese and Tibetan languages may not be counted toward
either major or minor requirements.
MINOR
Consists of four nonlanguage courses.
A language minor can be obtained
by taking four courses in Chinese,
Japanese, or Korean. However, elementary levels I and II of these three
languages will not be counted
toward fulfilling the minor requirement. A student’s minor program
can be determined individually in
consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies.
Advanced Chinese I
V33.0205 Prerequisite: V33.0204 or
the equivalent. 4 points.
Reading and translation of wen-yen or
pai-hua texts in the humanities and
literature. The course is intended to
develop reading speed and comprehension of more advanced syntax and
styles. Text: Introduction to Literary
Chinese.
Advanced Chinese II
V33.0206 Prerequisite: V33.0205.
4 points.
Continuation of V33.0205, with
greater emphasis on wen-yen and a
gradual introduction of ku-wen (classical Chinese). Designed to help students learn to use original sources in
research.
Chinese Characters
V33.0210 Prerequisite: V33.0202,
V33.0248, V33.0256, or permission of
the instructor. Roberts. 2 points.
Philologically oriented introduction
to key cultural concepts of Chinese
civilization.
STUDIES
HONORS PROGRAM
Eligibility: Students must spend at
least two full years in residence at the
College of Arts and Science, completing at least 60 points of graded work
in the College. Students must maintain a general grade point average of
3.5 and a major average of 3.7.
Requirements:
1. Completion of the major
requirements.
2. Under the supervision of a
departmental faculty member, an
honors paper written as part of Independent Study, V33.0997 and
V33.0998, for 4 points in total (2
points during each semester) in the
student’s senior year, in addition to
the course work required of all
majors. The faculty supervisor and
the subject of the honors paper are
chosen in consultation with the
director of the program. The average
length of the paper is between 25
and 30 double-spaced, typed pages.
For general requirements, please see
Honors and Awards.
Computing and Writing in
Chinese I, II
V33.0211, 0212 Prerequisite:
V33.0204, or permission of the instructor. He. 4 points per term.
This controlled enrollment course,
first taught in spring 1996, teaches
students of advanced Chinese language ability how to compute with
and use various Chinese word processing programs.
Readings in Chinese Poetry I, II
V33.0213, 0214 Prerequisite:
V33.0204 or permission of the instructor.
2 points per term.
Begins with Shi Jing (The Book of
Songs) and continues through the
masterpieces of the T’ang Dynasty.
Conducted primarily in Chinese.
English translations of the poems are
provided as references.
Readings in Chinese Culture I, II
V33.0221, 0222 Prerequisite:
V33.0206 for V33.0221; V33.0221
for V33.0222 or permission of the
instructor. Jiao. 4 points per term.
Intends to assist students to enhance
their Chinese proficiency through
reading a large variety of materials
that have rich connotations of the
Chinese culture.
Classical Philosophical Chinese
V33.0223 Prerequisite: V33.0206 or
permission of the instructor. Roberts.
4 points.
This course in philosophical Chinese
centers on classic literary texts and
not modern conversational skills.
Students study classical texts and
make their own translations and
interpretations.
Chinese Language and Structure
V33.0225 Prerequisite: V33.0202 or
permission of the instructor. He. 4 points.
Gives the students an overall view of
the Chinese language, its history, its
process of evolution, its present and
future development, its linguistic
structure, and aspects in social linguistics.
Elementary Japanese I, II
V33.0247, 0248 No previous training
in the language is required. 4 points per
term.
Introductory course in modern spoken and written Japanese, designed
to develop fundamental skills in the
areas of speaking, listening, reading,
and writing. Gives contextualized
instructions to develop both communicative and cultural competency.
Systematically introduces the Japanese writing system (Hiragana,
Katakana, and Kanji).
Intermediate Japanese I, II
V33.0249, 0250 Prerequisite:
V33.0248 or its equivalent. 4 points per
term.
Continuing study of Japanese at the
intermediate level. Stresses reading
comprehension, spoken fluency, and
composition, with materials organized around social and cultural topics; continues to introduce new Kanji
characters.
Advanced Japanese I, II
V33.0252, 0253 Prerequisite:
V33.0250 or its equivalent. 4 points per
term.
Continuing study of Japanese at the
advanced level. Stresses reading comprehension, spoken fluency, and
composition; uses original materials,
such as newspaper/magazine articles,
TV news, and video. Introduces
additional Kanji characters.
Advanced use of Japanese and character dictionaries.
Elementary Korean I, II
V33.0254, 0255 4 points per term.
Designed to introduce the Korean
language at the elementary level.
Students study the language’s orthographic and phonetic systems, grammar, syntax, and vocabulary. Provides
a solid foundation in all aspects of
the language, including speaking,
listening, reading, and writing.
Introduces students to the language’s
major social and cultural contexts.
Intermediate Korean I, II
V33.0256, 0257 Prerequisite:
V33.0255 or equivalent. 4 points per
term.
The Korean language at the intermediate level: phonetics, grammar, syntax, and vocabulary. Emphasizes the
further development of reading,
speaking, listening, and writing.
Requires students to write about and
discuss given topics and to learn
approximately one hundred Chinese
characters as an integral part of the
Korean language system. Introduces
the language’s major social and cultural contexts.
Advanced Korean I, II
V33.0258, 0259 Prerequisite:
V33.0257 or equivalent. 4 points per
term.
This pair of courses is taught over
the two semesters in an academic
year and is meant to assist advanced
students of Korean language as they
continue to learn skills in conversation, reading, and writing. Reading
Korean newspapers and visiting
Korean Web sites are integrated as
part of the course’s instruction.
Literary Korean
V33.0260 Prerequisite: V33.0257 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
This course is meant to assist
advanced students of Korean language as they continue to learn skills
in reading and writing. This course
does not compete with Advanced
Korean I or II, as its subject matter
focuses on Korean texts of traditional
fiction and philosophy.
Readings in Japanese Culture I,
II
V33.0262, 0263 Prerequisite:
V33.0253 for V33.0262; V33.0262
for V33.0263 or permission of the
instructor. 4 points per term.
Designed to enhance advanced students’ Japanese proficiency through
readings about, and discussions of, a
variety of cultural and social topics
in Japan. Uses original materials,
such as newspapers, magazine articles, TV news, and video. A final
individual research project—which
comprises an oral presentation and a
term paper in the target language—
is an integral part of this pair of
courses. The class is conducted
entirely in Japanese.
Readings in Japanese
Literature I, II
V33.0264, 0265 Prerequisite:
V33.0263 for V33.0264; V33.0264
for V33.0265 or permission of the
instructor. Kaneko. 4 points per term.
Designed to engage students in critical readings of various genres of
Japanese literature, such as classical
texts, poetry, short stories, and novels,
as well as literary critiques. The class
is conducted entirely in Japanese.
Elementary Cantonese I, II
V33.0410, 0411 Identical to
V15.0410, 0411. No previous training
in the language is required. 4 points per
term.
Designed for native English speakers
and heritage students to acquire a
basic knowledge of spoken Cantonese. Introduce Cantonese pronunciation, Yale Romanization systems,
basic Cantonese grammar and syntactic structures, daily use vocabulary, phrases and expressions, some
frequently used Chinese characters,
and Chinese culture and lifestyle,
mainly that originating from Hong
Kong and Canton.
Intermediate Cantonese I, II
V33.0412, 0413 Identical to
V15.0412, 0413. Prerequisite:
V33.0411 or its equivalent. 4 points per
term.
Designed for native English speakers
and heritage students who have
acquired a basic knowledge of spoken Cantonese or have fulfilled the
requirement of Elementary Cantonese I and II. Introduces the
advanced Cantonese grammar and
syntactic structures, daily use vocabulary, phrases and expressions, more
Chinese characters, and Chinese culture and lifestyle, mainly that originating from Hong Kong and Canton.
Advanced Business Chinese I, II
V33.0603,0604 Prerequisite:
V33.0204 or the equivalent. 4 points.
Advanced level Chinese language
courses with an emphasis on training
EAST
ASIAN
STUDIES
•
83
in the skill areas of listening, speaking, reading, writing, and translating
in the context of business. Designed
for students who are interested in
doing business with the Chinesespeaking community (including
China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Singapore) and in the meantime want to
further improve their Chinese language proficiency. The goal is to
improve students’ language skills, and
to increase their knowledge of Chinese culture and business practices.
Cinema of Asia America: Moving
the Image
V33.8134 Identical to V15.0314.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
CIVILIZATION COURSES
Body, Gender, and Belief in
China
V33.0350 Identical to V90.0350.
4 points.
See description under Religious Studies
(90).
Major Themes and World
History: Colonialism and
Imperialism
V33.0031 Identical to V57.0031.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
History of East Asia to 1840
V33.0052 Identical to V57.0052.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
History of East Asia Since 1840
V33.0053 Identical to V57.0053.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Introduction to Chinese Painting
V33.0084 Identical to V43.0084.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Asian Art I: China, Korea, Japan
V33.0091 Identical to V43.0091.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Topics in Asian History
V33.0095 Identical to V57.0095.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Arts of War in China
V33.0244 Identical to V57.0544.
Waley-Cohen. 4 points.
Explores representations of warfare in
Chinese literature and history from
the preimperial age to the 20th century. Readings consist of Chinese literary and historical texts in translation, including military classics, histories, novels, poetry, and short stories. Aims to give students a sense of
the centrality of military themes in
Chinese cultural life and of the deeprooted origins of the modern militarized state in China.
84
•
EAST
ASIAN
Asian and Asian American
Contemporary Art
V33.0319 Identical to V15.0319.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Belief and Social Life in China
V33.0351 Identical to V90.0351.
4 points.
See description under Religious Studies
(90).
Arts of China
V33.0506 Identical to V43.0506.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Asian Art in New York Museums
V33.0507 Identical to V43.0507.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Buddhist Art
V33.0508 Identical to V43.0508.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Modern China
V33.0535 Identical to V57.0535.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Gender and Radicalism in
Modern China
V33.0536 Identical to V57.0536 and
V97.0536. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
History of Modern Japan
V33.0537 Identical to V57.0537.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Chinese Society and Culture,
1550-1950
V33.0539 Identical to V57.0539.
Prerequisite: V57.0052 or V57.0053 or
equivalent, or permission of the instructor.
Waley-Cohen. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
STUDIES
Chinese Film and Society
V33.0540 4 points.
An examination of Chinese films in
broad social, political, and cultural
contexts. The specific topic varies
from filmic representation of revolution and socialism to the avant-garde
experimentation in post-Mao China.
The approach is comparative and
analytical, with a focus on the particular experiences of Chinese modernity as refracted by the visual images
and cultural politics. The course is
not limited to film productions of
the People’s Republic of China but
covers Chinese films made during
the Republican period (1911-1949)
and films from Taiwan and Hong
Kong as well. It is also designed to
inform students of the intellectual
and social environment that conditions the film production and of the
critical, theoretical development in
Chinese film studies.
Topics in Chinese History
V33.0551 Identical to V57.0551.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Seminar in Chinese History
V33.0552 Identical to V57.0552.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
East Asian Politics: China and
Japan
V33.0560 Identical to V53.0560.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Seminar: Japanese Modern in
Film and Literature
V33.0612 Identical to V57.0712.
Prerequisite: permission of the instructor.
L. Young. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
Arts of Japan
V33.0509 Identical to V43.0509.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
20th-Century Korean Literature
in Translation
V33.0611 4 points.
Provides an overview of 20th-century
Korean literature, tracing its development under the competing influences of tradition, history, and the
West. Readings include drama, poetry,
and fiction from modern and contemporary periods. Includes occasional
lectures on classical forms of Korean
literature and drama.
Seminar: Japan and World War II
in Asia
V33.0710 Identical to V57.0710.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
The Invention of Modern
Japanese Literature
V33.0720 Vincent. 4 points.
This course focuses on the part
played by “literature” in the establishment of national and individual
subjectivity in prewar Japan (18681945). It is one of the great ironies of
modernity that the emergence of
national community is marked by an
ever-greater isolation of the individual subject. Readings of literary texts
in combination with critical essays
help students to examine this paradox in relation to changes in the
practice of reading, the construction
of the “reader” and the “author,” the
practice and effects of translation and
travel, the privileging of the spoken
voice, and the solidification of the
“novel” as a genre. We pay as much
attention to formal questions such as
point of view and narrative strategy
as to “content” and are ever wary of
the fact that we are reading in translation.
Modern Japanese Literature in
Translation II
V33.0721 Vincent. 4 points.
This course exposes students to some
of the most provocative and entertaining novels written in Japanese
since the end of the Second World
War. Students see how the collapse
of totalizing ideologies brought by
Japan’s defeat led to an extremely
fertile and yet somewhat atomized
literary landscape. In this new postwar terrain, it became increasingly
difficult to think of literature in
terms of “schools” or “influences,” as
questions of cultural and individual
identity became harder and harder to
answer in a world of material prosperity and cultural hybridization.
Introduction to the Civilization of
Imperial China
V33.0722 Roberts. 4 points.
Basic introduction to the writings of
Confucius, his adversaries, and his
successors, followed by a reading of
several novels regarded as national
classics.
Narrative Fiction of Asia
V33.0726 No knowledge of Chinese
required. 4 points.
Reading of classic Chinese masterpieces to understand the art of storytelling in traditional China. Study
the narrative styles of literature as
well as the intellectual and political
history of the masterpieces. Curriculum includes the following: Three
Kingdoms, by Lo Guan-zhong (ca.
1330-1400); The Water Margin/Outlaws of the Marsh; Journey to the
West/Monkey; The Golden Lotus; Six
Chapters of a Floating Life; The Scholars; and Dream of the Red Chamber/
Story of the Stone.
Modernism and the Formation of
National Culture in Japan,
1900-1980
V33.0730 Identical to V57.0530.
Harootunian. 4 points.
Examines the process of capitalist
modernization and the formation of
the nation-state in modern Japan.
Particularly concerned with the relationship between political economy
and the formation of national culture
after World War I as it was articulated in a discourse on modernism, how
Japan became a modern society, and
what the experience meant.
Modern Chinese Literature
V33.0732 2 points.
Introduction to Chinese fiction of the
20th century. All English translations. Studies the language of fiction
in relation to its sociopolitical background and explores female portrayals and perspectives.
Modern Japanese Literature
V33.0733 No knowledge of Japanese
required. Roberts. 2 points.
Major literary styles of Japan from
the turn of the century to the present. Examines examples of naturalism, realism, and romanticism.
Explores through literature the intellectual, sociological, and economic
changes in Japan during the turbulent period following Japan’s emergence as a world power.
Japan Through Its Literature
V33.0734 No knowledge of Japanese
required. Roberts. 4 points.
Explores the origins of the Japanese
people and language in view of
recent research in linguistics, anthropology, and archaeology. Traces the
early cultural intercourse between
China and Japan, especially the Chinese cultural pattern having lasting
effects on the social and political
structure of Japan. Compares the
religions of Japan (Shintoism, Buddhism, and Christianity) as they
relate to Japanese civilization and
ideas.
The Modern Korea and the
Korean Diaspora
V33.0735 4 points.
Broad survey of the foundations of
Korean civilization and the adaptation of these forms in modern Korea.
Analyzes both tradition and mass
culture, including the roles of Confucianism and Buddhism as they interact with popular traditions in religion, art, literature, and politics.
Includes study of women, education,
and folklore.
Vietnam: Its History, Its Culture,
and Its Wars
V33.0737 Identical to V57.0737.
Roberts, M. Young. 4 points.
The first half of the course deals with
the culture and history of Vietnam in
three contexts: Chinese, Indochinese,
and Indian history; Western (particularly French and American) history;
and the period of Japanese control
during World War II. The second
half explores the American role in
Vietnam and the historical and cultural impact of the war on Vietnam
and the United States.
International Relations of Asia
V33.0770 Identical to V53.0770.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Buddhism
V33.0832 Identical to V90.0832.
4 points.
See description under Religious Studies
(90).
Chinese and Japanese Religions
V33.0835 Identical to V90.0340.
4 points.
See description under Religious Studies
(90).
Topics in Asian Studies
V33.0950 4 points.
Topics vary from semester to semester. A recent topic was postwar
Japanese literature.
Internship
V33.0980, 0981 Harootunian. 2 or
4 points per term.
Independent Study
V33.0997, 0998 Harootunian. 2 or
4 points per term.
EAST
ASIAN
STUDIES
•
85
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Economics (31)
269 MERCER STREET, 7TH FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6687. (212) 998-8900. WWW.ECON.NYU.EDU.
CHAIRMAN OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Gale
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Professor Ramsey
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR
OF UNDERGRADUATE
STUDIES:
Associate Professor Topa
Faculty
T
he Department of Economics offers a curriculum that prepares students for professional careers in industry, universities, and government. A major or minor in economics is also useful as a background for careers in law, health, international affairs,
business management, public administration, journalism, and politics.
Despite the fact that the department is large, student-faculty rapport is excellent,
with advanced and honors students working individually with professors.
The economics faculty is involved in active research, using the University’s excellent computer facilities and libraries. Many faculty members are associated with research
institutes. The C. V. Starr Center for Applied Economics, directed by Professor Mark
Gertler, bridges the gap between academic research and decision making in business and
government. It analyzes issues with important economic and social consequence and disseminates the results of its research to the business community through a series of conferences, monographs, seminars, and research papers. The Institute for Economic Analysis,
directed by Edward Wolff, is an institute that explores theoretical and empirical questions
using input-output as a primary tool of analysis.
Professor Emeritus:
Haines
Paulette Goddard Professor of
Political Economy:
Benhabib
Henry and Lucy Moses Professor
of Economics:
Gertler
Program
MAJOR
In order to allow students to select
an approach to the study of economics that is more suitable to their personal aptitudes and interests, a major
in economics can be taken in either
of two concentrations as described
below.
Transfer students should note
that normally the only courses that
will be accepted toward the major in
86
•
ECONOMICS
Jay Gould Professor of
Economics:
Nadiri
Professors:
Baumol, Benoit, Caplin, Denoon,
Fernandez, Flinn, Frydman, Gale,
Gately, Jovanovic, Keane, Nyarko,
Ordover, Ramsey, Ray, Schotter,
Wilson, Wolff
economics are courses that have been
passed with a grade of C or better at
universities with an intensive fouryear program.
A grade of C or better is required
for a course to count toward the
major in economics. Note: if a student fails a course required for the
major, the course must be retaken in
the department; a course taken outside the University will not normally
Associate Professors:
Lizzeri, Ok, Prager, Rizzo
Clinical Associate Professor:
Lieberman
Assistant Professors:
Benigno, Bisin, Comin, Eliaz, Lagos,
Lee, Ludvigson, Razin, Topa
Clinical Assistant Professor:
Kitsikopoulos
be allowed to substitute for a failed
course. No course for the major may
be taken as “Pass/Fail.”
Policy concentration. The policy
concentration is intended for the student who is primarily interested in
the application of economic principles to understanding current events,
economic institutions, and the formation of government policy. The
introductory and intermediate theory
courses provide the student with a
solid foundation of the basic framework for economic analysis with an
emphasis on economic applications.
The elective courses focus on economic policy and institutions. This
concentration is particularly well
suited for students planning careers
in law, public policy, business, or any
other field in which a thorough
understanding of economic problems
and the economic way of thinking
would be beneficial.
At least 42 points (10 courses)
are to be taken in the Department of
Economics: V31.0001, V31.0002,
V31.0010, V31.0012, V31.0018 (6
points), V31.0238, and four additional 4-point courses. Of these four
electives, at least two must be numbered V31.0300-399. At least one of
these electives must be V31.0323,
V31.0324, V31.0351, or V31.0353.
A typical sequence of courses is
indicated by sophomore year:
V31.0001, V31.0002, V31.0018;
junior year: V31.0010, V31.0012,
V31.0238; senior year: four electives.
Students are strongly advised to
pay close attention to the prerequisites for each course. While calculus
is not a formal requirement for the
policy concentration, students should
be aware that Precalculus (V63.0009),
or its equivalent, is required and that
it is inevitable that some mathematics will be used throughout the program. Because of this, students are
urged to take Calculus I (V63.0121)
in order to facilitate their training in
economics.
Theory concentration. The theory
concentration is intended for the student who wishes to begin the formal
study of economic reasoning with an
emphasis on mastering the analytical
tools. This concentration relies on a
higher level of abstraction and focuses on techniques of economic analysis
rather than on the understanding of
specific economic problems or institutions. It is particularly well-suited
for students who intend to pursue a
Ph.D. degree in economics or those
pursuing careers or higher degrees in
quantitative fields such as finance.
At least 40 points (10 courses)
are to be taken in the Department of
Economics that must include
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0020,
V31.0011, V31.0013, V31.0266,
and four economics electives. Two of
those electives must be courses numbered V31.0300-399 and designated
as theory classes. Furthermore, stu-
dents must complete V63.0121,
V63.0122, and V63.0123. These calculus courses should be completed
before or during the student’s first
year in the program.
A typical course sequence is
sophomore year: V31.0005,
V31.0006, V31.0020; junior year:
V31.0011, V31.0013, V31.0266,
one elective; senior year: three
electives.
Changing concentrations. Students
with permission from the director of
undergraduate studies may change
from the policy concentration to the
theory concentration, or vice versa;
however, certain rules apply. In
either case no course may be taken
for which the student does not have
the appropriate prerequisites; this
includes the mathematics prerequisites. A student moving from the
policy concentration to the theory
concentration after having taken
V31.0001 and V31.0002 need not
take V31.0005, but must take
V31.0006. A student moving from
the theory concentration to the policy concentration need not take either
of the Principles courses, provided
they have completed V31.0005 and
V31.0006.
Transferring between concentrations after students have completed
any of the intermediate theory courses is very difficult, more so in going
from the policy to the theory concentration. Students who are unsure
about which concentration to take
should seek departmental advice
before beginning their major.
MINOR
Students may minor in economics in
either concentration. A minor
enables a student to acquire a useful
understanding of economic concepts
and analysis without the same degree
of coverage as would be obtained in a
major.
A grade of C or better is required
for a course to count toward the
minor in economics. Note: If a student fails a course required for the
minor, the course must be retaken in
the department; a course taken outside the University will not normally
be allowed to substitute for a failed
course. No course for the minor may
be taken as “Pass/Fail.”
Policy minor. At least 26 points
(6 courses) to be taken in the Department of Economics, including
V31.0001, V31.0002, V31.0018,
either V31.0010 or V31.0012,
and two additional 4-point courses
for which the student has the
prerequisites.
Theory minor. At least 24 points (6
courses) to be taken in the Department of Economics to include
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0020, at
least one of V31.0011 or V31.0013,
and any other two courses for which
the student has the prerequisites.
JOINT MAJOR IN
ECONOMICS AND
COMPUTER SCIENCE
This is an interdisciplinary major
offered by the Department of Computer Science with the Department
of Economics. There are requirements in three departments, including mathematics. A grade of C or
better is required in all courses.
The mathematics requirements
are V63.0120, V63.0121, V63.0122,
and V63.0123.
The computer science requirements are V22.0101, V22.0102,
V22.0201, V22.0202, V22.0310,
and four computer science electives
numbered V22.0400 or higher. One
of these electives may be replaced by
any one of V63.0124, V31.0310,
V31.0337, V31.0365, or V31.0375.
The economics requirements are
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0011,
V31.0013, V31.0020, V31.0266,
plus any three economics elective
courses, at least two of which must
be a theory electives numbered
V31.0300 to V31.0399. One of
these electives may be replaced by
V22.0444.
JOINT MAJOR IN
ECONOMICS AND
MATHEMATICS
A joint major is offered by the
Departments of Economics (31) and
Mathematics (63). In the economics
department, joint majors with mathematics may only take the theory
sequence. Nine courses must be
taken from each department.
The mathematics requirements
are nine 4-point courses numbered
V63.0120 or higher, which must
include V63.0325 and V63.0326.
The computer science course
V22.0101 may be credited toward
the nine-course requirement.
The economics requirements are
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0011,
V31.0013, V31.0020, V31.0266,
plus any three economics elective
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courses, at least two of which must
be theory electives numbered
V31.0300 to V31.0399.
Interested students should consult with the director of undergraduate studies in both departments for
additional information.
HONORS PROGRAM
Honors may be taken in either concentration. Students interested in
going to graduate school or professional schools are strongly urged to
take honors.
A 3.5 overall grade point average
and a 3.5 average in economics
courses are required. Honors students
are required to complete either
V31.0266 (theory concentration) or
V31.0380 (policy concentration).
Students are also required to write an
honors thesis under faculty supervi-
Courses
In the list of courses below, some
courses are designated either “P” or
“T.” “P” represents courses to be
taken only by students in the policy
concentration; “T” represents courses
to be taken only by students in the
theory concentration. With permission of the director of undergraduate
studies, students may take courses in
the other concentration; the major
constraint is that such students have
the required prerequisites to enter
the course.
Economics course numbers fall
into four major groups. Core courses
are numbered below 0100. Courses
numbered 0100 to 0199 require no
prerequisites. Elective courses numbered 0200 to 0299 require the first
year core courses. Elective courses
numbered 0300 and above require
the second-year core courses.
FIRST-YEAR CORE COURSES
Economic Principles I (P)
V31.0001 Prerequisite: V63.0009
(Precalculus), or equivalent. 4 points.
This course focuses on the economy
as a whole (the “macroeconomy”).
The course begins with the meaning
and measurement of important
macroeconomic data (on unemployment, inflation, and production),
then turns to the behavior of the
overall economy. Topics include
long-run economic growth and the
standard of living; the causes and
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ECONOMICS
sion. Students interested in taking
honors register for V31.0410 in the
fall semester of the senior year in
order to prepare for V31.0400, to be
taken in the spring semester of that
year. Students are strongly advised to
begin the process toward the end of
the spring semester of the junior
year.
Interested students should consult with the director of undergraduate studies. For general requirements,
see under Honors and Awards.
INCOMPLETES
The Department of Economics
expects all students to complete their
courses on time. Incompletes are permitted only under exceptional, welldocumented circumstances. To
obtain an incomplete, a student must
submit a form that has to be signed
by the professor and the director of
undergraduate studies in economics;
the student should do this immediately. Incompletes must be removed
by the end of the semester following
the incomplete or they will revert
automatically to a grade of F.
All makeup finals should be
scheduled with the department in
the first month of the following
semester. A fee is collected by the
department to pay for proctoring.
Any student who fails to complete a
course on time will receive an F, not
an incomplete, unless the procedure
for incompletes outlined above is followed. A student may petition for an
extension of time to remove the
incomplete, but such requests will
only be granted under the most
unusual circumstances.
consequences of economic booms and
recessions; the banking system and
the Federal Reserve; the stock and
bond markets; international
exchange rates and the impact of
global economic events; and the role
of government policy.
dents for subsequent course work in
the theory concentration. Topics
include game theory, decision making by households and firms, competitive markets, long-run economic
growth, disequilibrium, and shortrun economic fluctuations.
Economic Principles II (P)
V31.0002 Prerequisite: V63.0009
(Precalculus), or equivalent. 4 points.
This course focuses on individual
economic decision-makers—households, business firms, and government agencies—and how they are
linked together. The emphasis is on
decision making by households and
firms, and how these decisions shape
our economic life. The course
explores the different environments
in which businesses sell their products, hire workers, and raise funds to
expand their operations; the economic effects of trade between nations;
and the effects of various government
policies, such as minimum wage legislation, rent controls, antitrust laws,
and more.
Mathematics for Economists (T)
V31.0006 Identical to C31.0006.
Corequisite: V63.0123. Restrictions:
Open to freshmen and sophomores only.
4 points.
This course is specifically designed to
provide the appropriate mathematical tools for study in the theory concentration. Examples and motivation
are drawn from important topics in
economics. Topics covered include
elementary set theory and the
abstract notion of a function; Cartesian products; convex sets and concave functions; differential calculus
and partial derivatives; integration
and the fundamental theorem of calculus; first and second order conditions for a maximum; implicit functions; and constrained optimization.
Introduction to Economic
Analysis (T)
V31.0005 Identical to C31.0005.
Corequisite: V63.0121. Restriction:
Open to freshmen and sophomores only.
4 points.
This course introduces some of the
important tools economists use to
solve problems, provides examples of
how they are used, and prepares stu-
Statistics (P)
V31.0018 Prerequisites: V63.0009
(Precalculus), or equivalent. Restriction:
Not open to any student who has taken
V31.0020. 6 points.
Introduction to statistics. Topics:
descriptive statistics; introduction to
probability; sampling; statistical
inferences concerning means, stan-
dard deviations, and proportions;
analysis of variance; linear regressions; and correlation. Laboratory
periods cover sample problems
drawn primarily from economics.
This course meets three times a week
plus a lab session.
Regression and Forecasting
Models (P)
V31.0019 Identical to C22.0003.
Restrictions: This course, given by the
Stern School of Business, is open only to
students who declare a major in economics
after having taken a course in statistics
for 4 points outside the department and
who will not have had a thorough
grounding in multiple regression. If the
outside course is acceptable to the Department of Economics for the material leading up to regression, the student must
complete this course with a passing grade
to satisfy his or her statistical requirement in the department. 2 points.
An introduction to the linear regression model, inference in regression
analysis, multiple regression analysis,
and an introduction to time series
analysis.
Analytical Statistics (T)
V31.0120 Prerequisite: V63.0121
Restrictions: This course is not open to
any student who has taken V31.0018.
4 points.
Introduction to statistical reasoning.
This is a more analytically orientated
course than V31.0018 and provides
the introduction to Econometrics,
V31.0266. Topics covered include
descriptive statistics, calculation of
moments, probability theory, an
introduction to distribution theory,
and an introduction to inference. Lab
sessions enable the student to run a
wide variety of computer experiments and to simulate all distributions that are discussed as well as to
experiment with a wide variety of
statistical procedures.
SECOND-YEAR CORE
COURSES
Intermediate Microeconomics (P)
V31.0010 Identical to C31.0010.
Prerequisite: V31.0002 or equivalent.
4 points.
Examines the manner in which producers, consumers, and resource
owners acting through the market
determine the prices and output of
goods, the allocation of productive
resources, and the functional distribution of incomes. The price system is
seen as a network of interrelated
decisions, with the market process
serving to communicate information
to decision makers.
Microeconomics (T)
V31.0011 Identical to C31.0011.
Prerequisites: V31.0005, V31.0006,
V63.0123. 4 points.
Rigorous examination of consumer
choice, profit-maximizing behavior
on the part of firms, and equilibrium
in product markets. Topics include
choice under uncertainty, strategic
interactions between firms in noncompetitive environments, intertemporal decision making, and investment in public goods.
Intermediate Macroeconomics:
Business Cycles and Stabilization
Policy (P)
V31.0012 Identical to C31.0012.
Prerequisite: V31.0001 or equivalent.
4 points.
Study of aggregate economic analysis
with special attention paid to the
determination of the level of income,
employment, and inflation. Critically
examines both the theories and the
policies associated with them.
Macroeconomics (T)
V31.0013 Identical to C31.0013.
Prerequisites: V31.0005, V31.0006,
V63.0123.4 points.
Study of aggregate economic analysis, with attention paid to the determination of the level of income,
employment, and inflation. Critically
examines both the theories and the
policies associated with them. This
course involves more formal analysis
than that used in V31.0012.
International Economics
V31.0238 Prerequisites: V31.0001
and V31.0002, or V31.0005. Restriction: Cannot be taken for credit in addition to International Trade, V31.0335
or International Finance, V31.0336.
4 points.
This course focuses on international
trade in goods, services, and capital.
It serves as an introduction to international economic issues and as
preparation for the department’s
more advanced course in Topics in
the Global Economy. The issues discussed include gains from trade and
their distribution; analysis of protectionism; strategic trade barriers; the
trade deficit; exchange rate determination; exchange-rate arbitrage; spot,
forward, and futures markets for for-
eign exchange; government intervention in foreign exchange markets;
balance of payments problems; and
an introduction to macroeconomic
policy in an open economy.
Introduction to Econometrics (T)
V31.0266 Formerly V31.0366. Identical to C31.0266. Prerequisites:
V31.0005, V31.0020; corequisite:
V63.0123. 4 points.
Application of statistics and economic theory to problems of formulating
and estimating models of economic
behavior. Matrix algebra is developed
as the main tool of analysis in regression. Acquaints students with basic
estimation theory and techniques in
the regression framework and covers
extensions such as specification error
tests, heteroskedasticity, errors in
variables and simple time series
models. An introduction to simultaneous equation modes and the concept of identification are provided.
ELECTIVE COURSES:
100 LEVEL
History of Economic Thought
V31.0106 Identical to C31.0106.
4 points.
Traces the development of modern
economics from its roots in the 18th
and 19th centuries and the first half
of the 20th century. Schools of
thought include mercantilism, classical economics, Marxist thought, historical and institutional analyses,
early Austrians, and modern microeconomic and macroeconomic theories. Major figures studied include
Smith, Ricardo, Malthus, Marx,
Veblen, and Keynes. Places economic
thought within the context of its historical and political settings.
ELECTIVE COURSES:
200 LEVEL
Economic History of the United
States
V31.0205 Identical to C31.0205.
Prerequisites: V31.0001 and
V31.0002, or V31.0005. 4 points.
Analytic survey of the structure of
the U.S. economy. National income
and its distribution; population and
land; capital accumulation and development of financial institutions;
labor and labor unions; technological
change; the market, both domestic
and foreign; and the economic effects
of government policy.
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Ethics and Economics
V31.0207 Identical to C31.0207.
Prerequisite: V31.0002 or V31.0005.
4 points.
Study of the interface between ethical and economic theories. Specific
topics covered include a brief
overview of various ethical ideas, an
analysis of the ethical presuppositions of modern economic theory
(especially welfare economics), utilitarian ethics, the moral status of free
exchange, the ethical implications of
imperfect knowledge between bargaining parties, cost-benefit analysis
and human rights, the economic content of the “general welfare,” and
laissez-faire.
Urban Economics
V31.0227 Identical to C31.0227 and
V99.0310. Prerequisite: V31.0002 or
V31.0005. 4 points.
The city as an economic organization. Urbanization trends, functional
specialization, and the nature of
growth within the city; organization
of economic activity within the city
and its outlying areas, the organization of the labor market, and problems of urban poverty; the urban
public economy; housing and landuse problems; transportation problems; and special problems within
the public sector.
Money and Banking
V31.0231 Prerequisite: V31.0001 or
V31.0005. 4 points.
Money supply; banking as an industry; banks as suppliers of money; the
Federal Reserve System and monetary control; monetary theory; and
contemporary monetary policy issues.
Poverty and Income Distribution
V31.0233 Identical to C31.0233.
Prerequisite: V31.0002 or V31.0005.
4 points.
Defines poverty and welfare. Analyzes
who the poor are, why some people
are rich and others poor, equality of
opportunity, income and status,
inequality, trends in the degree of
inequality, government’s role in
income distribution, and international comparisons of inequality.
Gender and Choices
V31.0252 Identical to C31.0252 and
V97.0252. Prerequisites: V31.0001
and V31.0002, or V31.0005. 4 points.
Examines important economic influences on decisions women make concerning labor force participation and
family. Theory of labor market
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ECONOMICS
behavior and discrimination, as well
as public policy options.
Economics of the Law
V31.0255 Identical to C31.0255.
Prerequisite: V31.0002 or V31.0005.
4 points.
Introduction to economic analysis of
a variety of legal issues. Explores the
relationship of legal institutions and
laws to economic efficiency and
social goals (such as justice). Topics
are chosen from among the following: economics of property rights,
externalities and environmental control, administrative processes, crime,
contracts and liability, public utility
and antitrust regulations, and individual rights and discrimination.
ELECTIVE COURSES:
300 LEVEL
Strategic Decision Theory (T)
V31.0310 Identical to C31.0310.
Prerequisites: V31.0011. 4 points.
The course is an introduction to noncooperative game theory. The course
focuses on a rigorous development of
the basic theory with economic
applications such as competition
among oligopolists, how standards
are set, auction theory, and bargaining. The formal topics include games
in strategic form, Bayesian games,
and games in extensive form.
Industrial Organization
V31.0316 Identical to C31.0316.
Prerequisite: V31.0010 or V31.0011.
4 points.
Analysis of the structure, conduct,
and performance of firms and industries. Involves the development of a
theoretical basis for evaluating performance. Analysis of competition as
a state-of-affairs versus competition
as a process. The effects of advertising, economic concentration, and
innovation upon prices and production. Overall survey of contemporary
antitrust law and economics.
Market Structure and
Performance (T)
V31.0317 Identical to C31.0317.
Prerequisite: V31.0011.4 points.
This course is designed to familiarize
students with a modern approach to
industrial organization economics.
The modern approach relies extensively on the use of game-theoretic
tools to model strategic market
behavior and on extensive use of
econometric methods for testing
hypotheses regarding firm conduct
and market performance. In particular, the course analyzes profit-maximizing business strategies of firms
with market power as well as strategic interactions among firms in various types of imperfectly competitive
markets. The course addresses both
static modes of competition as well
as dynamic competition in R&D and
product design. The course also
examines the scope of effective public
policies designed to improve market
performance. Throughout the course,
mathematical-based models is used
to develop the relevant concepts and
test the pertinent theories of firm
behavior.
Economic Development
V31.0323 Identical to C31.0323.
Prerequisite: V31.0012 and V31.0238,
or V31.0013. 4 points.
This course studies the problem of
economic underdevelopment, with
special reference to the countries of
Asia, Latin America, and Africa. The
building blocks of economic theory
are used to understand the historical
experiences of these countries.
Macroeconomic topics covered
include economic growth, income
distribution and poverty, with particular emphasis on the concept of
underdevelopment as a circular, selfreinforcing trap. Microeconomic topics include the study of particular
markets that are especially relevant
to developing countries: those for
land, labor, and credit. Notions of
market fragmentation, limited information, and incentive problems
receive emphasis. The course ends
with international issues: trading
patterns, capital flows, and global
financial crises are studied from the
viewpoint of developing countries.
Topics in the Global Economy
V31.0324 Identical to C31.0324.
Prerequisites: V31.0012 and
V31.0238, or V31.0013. 4 points.
This course covers special topics in
the context of a global economy; they
include fiscal and monetary policy
under alternative exchange rate
regimes; international transmission
mechanisms; barriers to capital
mobility; international policy coordination; optimum currency areas, customs unions and free trade areas;
multilateral trade; trade liberalization policies; and the role of the
World Bank and of the I.M.F.
Economics of Energy and the
Environment
V31.0326 Identical to C31.0326.
Prerequisite: V31.0010 or V31.0011.
4 points.
Economic analysis of major policy
issues in energy and the environment, both domestic and international. Emphasis on market solutions
to various problems and market limitations in the allocation of environmental resources. Energy issues focus
on OPEC and world oil markets,
with attention to reducing oil
import vulnerability; taxation and
regulation of production and consumption; conservation of natural
resources; and the transition to alternative energy sources. Environmental
issues include policies to reduce pollution. Substantial attention is paid
to global warming caused by consumption of fossil fuels.
International Trade (T)
V31.0335 Identical to C31.0335.
Prerequisite: V31.0011. Restriction:
Cannot be taken for credit in addition to
International Economics, V31.0238.
4 points.
The course examines theories of
international trade as well as related
empirical evidence. Topics include
the relationship between trade and
economic growth, the theory of customs unions, international factor
movements, trade between unequal
partners, and trade under imperfect
competition.
International Finance (T)
V31.0336 Identical to C31.0336.
Prerequisite: V31.0013. Restriction:
Cannot be taken for credit in addition to
International Economics, V31.0238.
4 points.
Financial and macroeconomic issues
in international economics, the balance of payments, gold and other
assets in international portfolios,
exchange rate determination, problems of simultaneous achievement of
internal and external policy goals,
and interdependence of countries’
macroeconomic policies.
Economics of Forward, Futures,
and Options Markets (T)
V31.0337 Identical to C31.0337.
Prerequisite: V31.0011. 4 points.
Provides an understanding of the
operation and economic role of contracts in forward, futures, and
options markets in an economic
environment of increased price
uncertainty. Includes government
regulation of these markets, the role
of the hedger and the speculator, and
theories of price movements relevant
to the markets.
Ownership and Corporate Control in Advanced and Transition
Economies
V31.0340 Identical to C31.0340.
Prerequisites: V31.0010 or V31.0011,
V31.0018 or V31.0020. 4 points.
This course discusses the conceptual
foundations and empirical evidence
concerning the effects of private
ownership on corporate performance.
The corporate control mechanisms in
the U.S., Germany, Japan, and the
emerging market economies of Eastern Europe and the former Soviet
Union is reviewed. Particular attention is paid to the role of capital
markets (takeovers and other shareholder control devices), banks, and
other financial institutions, and various corporate institutions (such as
boards of directors and shareholders
meetings) in facilitating, or hindering, corporate control and the efficient allocation of resources.
Political Economy (T)
V31.0345 Identical to C31.0345.
Prerequisite: V31.0011. 4 points.
This course introduces the emerging
field of formal political economy.
The variety of ways in which economists and political scientists think
about political science and the interplay of political science and economics are analyzed. The first part of the
course focuses on the formal modeling of political behavior and political
institutions. In this part the theory
of social choice (how groups of rational individuals make decisions) and
collective action (how groups of
rational individuals take action) are
analyzed. The second part of the
course discusses the connection
between politics and economics and
investigates the effect of political
variables on the determination of
economic outcomes. Some questions
that are answered: How can special
groups of individuals enhance their
well being by political action? What
is lobbying? What is the effect of
contributions on political outcomes?
Labor Economics
V31.0351 Identical to C31.0351.
Prerequisite: V31.0010 or V31.0011.
4 points.
Analyzes the functioning of the labor
market in both theoretical and statistical terms. Examines the determi-
nants of wage and employment levels
in perfect and imperfect labor markets, including the concept of education and training as human capital.
Models of labor market dynamics are
also examined, including those of job
search and matching. The role of
public policy in the functioning of
labor markets is highlighted
throughout.
Public Economics
V31.0353 Formerly Public Sector
Finance. Identical to C31.0353. Prerequisite: V31.0010 or V31.0011.
4 points.
This course in alternate years stresses
policy implications and the development of the theory. Analysis of government economic policies and
behavior. Normative and positive
economics; the fundamental welfare
theorems. What goods should the
government provide (public goods)?
When should the government tax
private behavior (externalities)?
Income redistribution and the welfare program. Who pays the tax (tax
incidence)? The role of debt policy.
On what should taxes be levied
(optimal taxation)?
Experimental Economics
V31.0360 Identical to C31.0360.
Prerequisite: V31.0010 or V31.0011.
4 points.
Experimental economics is predicated on the belief that economics, like
other sciences, can be a laboratory
science where economic theories are
tested, rejected, and revised. This
course reviews the methodology of
doing such laboratory experiments
and investigates the use of experiments in a wide variety of fields.
These include competitive markets,
auctions, public goods theory, labor
economics, game theory, and individual choice theory. The course is limited to 20 students and functions as a
research seminar in which students
present their work as it progresses
during the semester. Students also
get exposure to the experimental laboratory in the Department of Economics and the research performed
there.
Advanced Micro Theory (T)
V31.0365 Identical to C31.0365.
Prerequisites: V31.0011. 4 points.
This course is designed to introduce
the students to some of the main
model-building techniques that have
been developed by microeconomists.
The course is intended for advanced
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undergraduates who have taken the
necessary preparatory courses in economics and mathematics. Three basic
topics are covered. The first topic is
the static theory of consumer behavior both in a certain world and in an
uncertain world. The second topic is
the theory of general equilibrium.
The third topic is the theory of
dynamic optimization. In addition to
the coverage of the economics, the
advanced mathematical techniques
that are needed to understand the
material are reviewed.
Topics in Applied Economics
V31.0370 Identical to C31.0370.
Prerequisites: V31.0010 or V31.0011,
V31.0012 or V31.0013. 4 points.
Explores economic issues of economic
policy using the tools learned in the
intermediate micro- and macroeconomic courses. Focuses on a particular issue each term.
Topics in Economic Theory (T)
V31.0375 Identical to C31.0375.
Prerequisite: V31.0011, V31.0013.
Restriction: Cannot be taken for credit in
addition to Topics in Applied Economics,
V31.0370. 4 points.
Explores issues in economic theory
using the tools learned in macro and
microeconomics. Focuses on a particular issue each term.
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Topics in Econometrics (P)
V31.0380 Identical to C31.0380.
Prerequisites: V31.0010, V31.0012,
and V31.0018. 4 points.
This course examines a number of
important areas of econometrics. The
topics covered include identification
and estimation of simultaneous equations models; model specification
and testing; estimation of discrete
choice models; and the analysis of
duration models. In addition to covering the relevant theoretical issues
the course includes the application of
these methods to economic data.
HONORS AND
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V31.0997, 0998 Identical to
C31.0997 and C31.0998. Prerequisites: V31.0010 and V31.0012 ( or
V31.0011 and V31.0013), and permission of the director of undergraduate
studies. 1-4 points.
No more than a total of 8 points may
be taken of independent study. The
student engages in intensive independent study of an important economic topic under the direction of a
departmental faculty member. The
results of the study are embodied in
a report of a type required by the
instructor.
Honors Thesis
V31.0400 Identical to C31.0400.
This course is open only to honors students.
For description, see Honors Program.
4 points.
Normally, the thesis is written in the
senior year, but students are advised
to choose their topic and faculty
adviser by the beginning of the
senior year at the latest.
Honors Tutorial
V31.0410 Identical to C31.0410.
This course is open only to honors students.
For description, see Honors Program.
4 points.
The objective of the course is to train
students to write on economic topics
and perform economic analysis
efficiently and quickly as well as to
develop rhetorical skills. Once a
week two students each present a
paper on an assigned topic that has
been distributed previously to the
other students. The students not
presenting that week critiques the
paper and the presentation as will
the instructor. Each paper is to be
revised and submitted to the instructor with a cover sheet that indicates
how the student dealt with each of
the criticisms.
DUAL DEGREE PROGRAM IN
Engineering
(with Stevens Institute of Technology)
SILVER CENTER, 100 WASHINGTON SQUARE EAST, ROOM 905, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6688. (212) 998-8130.
DIRECTOR OF THE
PROGRAM AT NEW YORK
UNIVERSITY:
Associate Professor
Brenner
DIRECTOR OF THE
PROGRAM AT STEVENS
INSTITUTE OF
TECHNOLOGY:
Professor Cole
ASSISTANTS TO THE
DEAN FOR ENGINEERING
STUDENTS:
Joseph Hemmes and
Aara Kupris Menzi
Program
T
he dual degree program in science and engineering offers highly qualified and motivated students who are technically oriented the opportunity to pursue both a liberal arts program with a major in science and a traditional engineering program. The
program is ideal for the student interested in science and engineering who is also eager for
a liberal arts experience before entering an undergraduate engineering environment. On
completion of this five-year program, students receive the Bachelor of Science degree from
the College of Arts and Science at New York University and the Bachelor of Engineering
degree from Stevens Institute of Technology. Students with this combination of degrees are
likely to find excellent employment opportunities.
The available dual degree combinations are as follows: B.S. in biology/B.E. in
chemical engineering; B.S. in biology/B.E. in environmental engineering; B.S. in chemistry/B.E. in chemical engineering; B.S. in chemistry/B.E. in environmental engineering;
B.S. in computer science/B.E. in computer engineering; B.S. in computer science/B.E. in
electrical engineering; B.S. in computer science/B.E. in mechanical engineering; B.S. in
mathematics/B.E. in computer engineering; B.S. in mathematics/B.E. in electrical engineering; B.S. in mathematics/B.E. in mechanical engineering; B.S. in physics/B.E. in civil
engineering; B.S. in physics/B.E. in electrical engineering; and B.S. in physics/B.E. in
mechanical engineering.
Detailed programs of study for each of the curricula are available from Mr. Joseph
Hemmes and Ms. Aara Kupris Menzi, the advisers for all students in the various programs.
They may be contacted at the College Advising Center, Silver Center, 100 Washington
Square East, Room 905; (212) 998-8130.
Application materials for this joint degree program may be requested from New
York University, Office of Undergraduate Admissions, 22 Washington Square North, New
York, NY 10011-9191.
REQUIREMENTS
The dual degree program is designed
to meet the educational and career
interests of students with strong
qualifications, as evidenced by their
grade point average in high school
and by their performance in mathematics and science. Students who
rank near the top of their class and
who have done well on standardized
tests, particularly in mathematics,
are especially well suited.
Students should have completed
a rigorous college preparation program, including mathematics
(through trigonometry), chemistry,
and physics, and exhibited substantial
extracurricular activity and leadership.
Students are usually admitted to
the program as freshmen and must
be prepared to begin with Calculus I,
V63.0121, in the first semester of
college. Students must also be prepared to take Introduction to Computer Science I, V22.0101; this
course has a prerequisite, Introduction to Computers and Programming, V22.0002, which may be
waived by placement examination for
students with prior programming
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experience. Given the highly structured curricula, transfer into the program after the first year may be difficult. Students must maintain satisfactory performance in courses appropriate to the high technical requirements in order to remain in the program. Their records are reviewed
yearly by a faculty committee, and
students are approved by this committee for transfer to Stevens at the
end of the third year.
THE PROGRAM
Students accepted into the program
spend their first three years of study
in the College of Arts and Science at
New York University. In the first
year at the College, the different curricula call for many of the same
courses. This gives students time to
consult with faculty at both schools
before committing themselves to a
particular science/engineering major.
A typical first-year program might
consist of the following courses:
Fall semester: Writing the Essay,
V40.0100; Calculus I, V63.0121;
Engineering Design Laboratory I,
V37.0111; Physics I, V85.0091; and
either General Chemistry I,
V25.0101, and General Chemistry
Laboratory I, V25.0103, or Introduction to Computer Science I,
V22.0101.
Spring semester: a course from
the Morse Academic Plan (MAP);
Calculus II, V63.0122; Engineering
Design Laboratory II, V37.0112;
Physics II, V85.0093; and either
General Chemistry II, V25.0102,
and General Chemistry Laboratory
II, V25.0104, or Introduction to
Computer Science II, V22.0102.
At the end of the first year, if
they have not already done so, stu-
Courses
Engineering Design Laboratory I
and II
V37.0111-0112 1 point each term.
Introductory course in engineering
practices and principles of design of a
new product. Groups design, construct, and test projects in response
to stated requirements, within necessary constraints, and from among
alternative solutions. Computer use,
sketching, oral communications,
basic measurements, reverse engineering, and performance testing are
included. Teamwork is emphasized.
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ENGINEERING
dents select a major area for their
remaining two years of study at New
York University from the disciplines
of biology, chemistry, computer science, mathematics, and physics.
Seminars by Stevens departmental faculty advisers and by professional engineering leaders from private
firms are included in the Society of
Engineering Students’ weekly meetings to provide information to students about opportunities in the various engineering fields represented.
Students should choose their desired
engineering major by the end of the
second year. In the spring of the
third year, an orientation program
helps students prepare for the transition to Stevens in the fourth year. In
these first three years of the program,
students also satisfy their MAP
requirements. In the first year students are introduced to the engineering design experience with Engineering Design Laboratory I and II. In
the second and third years, students
are required to take engineering
courses, taught by Stevens faculty at
the Washington Square campus.
These courses are all subjects in the
“core” engineering curriculum, taken
by all engineering students, regardless of engineering major. These
courses are at the first level of engineering study and give students an
opportunity to learn the technical
feel of various engineering subjects.
The second-year courses are Mechanics of Solids, V37.5126 and Graphics
Design and Lab (CAD), V37.5211.
The third year courses are Circuits
and Systems, V37.7245, Electronics
and Instrumentation, V37.7246, and
Engineering Design Lab IV,
V37.0232. These introductory courses must be completed prior to entering the fourth year at Stevens.
These are difficult curricula, and
some programs may require summer
courses for some students. Stevens
has permitted students in the program tuition-free enrollment in a few
summer courses offered only at
Stevens (but not at NYU) to assist
students in maintaining curricular
progress. Students may elect to withdraw from the dual degree program
in engineering and complete only the
College of Arts and Science general
and major requirements at New York
University. Financial aid and scholarships, housing, dining, and other services are provided by New York University during the first three years.
The final two years of study are
undertaken at Stevens Institute of
Technology at Castle Point in Hoboken, New Jersey, directly across the
Hudson River and a short PATH
train ride from New York University’s
Greenwich Village campus.
At Stevens, students complete the
remaining technical courses, the
majority of the engineering courses,
and the senior design project in the
fifth year. Programs in engineering
available to students in the NYUStevens dual degree program include
chemical engineering, civil engineering, computer engineering, electrical
engineering, environmental engineering, and mechanical engineering.
In the last two years of the program, financial aid, housing, dining,
and other services are provided by
Stevens at the Castle Point campus.
Separate transcripts are supplied
by the two schools, and students
may make use of the facilities of the
career and placement offices of both
institutions.
Mechanics of Solids
V37.5126 Prerequisites: V63.0121,
V85.0091. 4 points.
Fundamental concepts of particle statics, equivalent force systems, equilibrium of rigid bodies, analysis of
trusses and frames, forces in beam
and machine parts, stress and strain,
tension, shear and bending moment,
flexure, combined loading, energy
methods, statically indeterminate
structures.
Graphics Design and Lab (CAD)
V37.5211 3 points.
Basics of engineering graphics
including perspective projection, parallel projection, multiview projection, descriptive geometry, auxiliary
views, reading and production of
technical drawings, and preparation
and presentation of engineering data.
Circuits and Systems
V37.7245 Corequisite: V63.0262.
4 points.
Ideal circuit elements; Kirchoff laws
and nodal analysis; source transformation; Thevenin/Norton theorems;
operational amplifiers; response of
RL, RC, and RLC circuits; sinusoidal
sources and steady state analysis;
analysis in frequency domain; average and RMS power; linear and ideal
transformer; linear models for transistors and diodes; analysis in the sdomain; Laplace transforms, transfer
functions.
Electronics and Instrumentation
V37.7246 Prerequisite: V37.7245.
4 points.
Signal acquisition procedures; instrumentation components; electronic
amplifiers; signal conditioning; lowpass, high-pass, and band-pass filters;
A/D converters and antialiasing filters; embedded control and instru-
mentation; micro-controllers; digital
and analog I/O; instruments for measuring physical quantities such as
motion, force, torque, temperature,
pressure, etc.; FFT and elements of
modern spectral analysis, random
signals, standard deviation, and bias.
Modern Physics for Engineers
V37.0200 Prerequisites: V63.0122,
V85.0093. 3 points.
The course builds on the Physics I
and Physics II sequence. Topics covered include oscillatory and wave
motion; principle of superposition;
interference; elementary quantum
concepts; the wave function; the
uncertainty principle; properties of
atoms, molecules, and solids; and
impact of quantum theory on engineering practice.
Engineering Design IV
V37.0232 Prerequisites: V37.01110112. Corequisite: V37.7246. 2 points.
This course continues the experiential sequence in design. The design
projects are linked with the Electronics and Instrumentation course
taught concurrently as are some
experiments that are included. Core
design themes are developed. Experiments and design projects promote
significant use of computer-based
instrumentation for data-acquisition,
analysis, and control. Enhancing
competencies in teamwork, project
management, and communications
are also goals of the course.
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D E PA RT M E N T O F
English (41)
19 UNIVERSITY PLACE, NEW YORK, NY 10003-4556. (212) 998-8800.
W W W. N Y U . E D U / F A S / E N G L I S H / U N D E R G R A D .
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Guillory
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor C.
Patell
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
OF UNDERGRADUATE
STUDIES FOR HONORS:
Assistant Professor Starr
Faculty
T
he study of English and American literature fosters the kind of intellectual training
that is central to a liberal arts education and useful in all professions. By learning to
read critically and to write with analytical precision, students who major in English
prepare themselves to participate intelligently in their culture while forging a lifelong,
enriching relationship with literature.
The department’s offerings are bolstered by the strong literature collections available on campus at the Elmer Holmes Bobst Library, which also houses the Fales Library of
English and American Literature. Students are also encouraged to make use of the research
opportunities presented by the excellent collections of the New York Historical Society and
the New York Public Library. The department provides opportunities for specialized
research through seminars, independent study courses, and an honors program that culminates in the writing of an honors thesis during the senior year under the supervision of a
faculty member. The department also offers elective credit for internships in publishing, at
literary agencies, and at other professional offices. The rich cultural life of New York City,
and of Greenwich Village in particular, make NYU an ideal location for the study of English
and American literature.
Professors Emeriti:
Greene, Harrier, Karl, Lahey, Lind,
Raymo, Silverman, Stone, Ward
Erich Maria Remarque Professor
of Creative Writing:
Kinnell
Associate Professors:
Freedgood, Hoover, V. Jackson,
Momma, C. Patell, Spear
Henry James Professor of English
and American Letters:
Donoghue
Albert A. Berg Visiting Professor:
Bloom
Assistant Professors:
Deer, Harries, McHenry, Rust,
Sandhu, Starr, Waterman, Waters
Erich Maria Remarque Professor
of Literature:
Carruthers
Lewis and Loretta Glucksman
Professor of American Letters:
Doctorow
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ENGLISH
University Professor:
Stimpson
Professors:
Chaudhuri, Collins, Dinshaw,
Gilman, Griffin, Guillory, Harper,
Haverkamp, Hendin, Hoy,
Lockridge, Low, Magnuson,
Marshall, Maynard, Meisel, Olds,
Poovey, Posnock
Visiting Professors:
Derrida, Perosa
Adjunct Faculty:
Christopher, Cirino, Equi, Foy,
Horwich, Lucero, Napier, Oliver,
Rosenthal, Rudman, Spanidou, Wolf
Affiliated Faculty:
Y. Feldman, Ronell
Program
OBJECTIVES
The department offers a full and varied curriculum in literary history,
critical theory, dramatic literature,
theatre history, and literary culture.
Its courses enable students to
immerse themselves in literary works
that reflect the values and aspirations
of our diverse cultural traditions.
The department offers two
majors: the major in English and
American literature and the major in
English literature with a specialization in writing. Qualified majors
may apply for admission to the honors program in English for an opportunity to do advanced independent
work.
The department also offers a
minor in English and American literature and a minor in creative writing.
Students should consult the
department’s undergraduate Web site
(www.nyu.edu/fas/english/undergrad) at
registration time for a list of courses
that satisfy the requirements outlined below and for more detailed
descriptions of the particular courses
offered in a given term.
MAJOR IN ENGLISH AND
AMERICAN LITERATURE
A minimum of 10 courses. Four
required core courses prerequisite to
advanced electives: V41.0200,
V41.0210, V41.0220, V41.0230.
Note: These courses should be taken
sequentially, with the exception that
V41.0210 may be taken concurrently with V41.0200 and V41.0230
may be taken concurrently with
V41.0220, if the major is begun
later than the second semester of the
freshman year.
Six advanced electives, distributed as follows: one course in critical
theories and methods; one elective in
British literature before 1800; three
advanced electives; and one seminar,
usually taken in the senior year.
MAJOR IN ENGLISH WITH
A SPECIALIZATION IN
WRITING
A minimum of 10 courses. Four
required core courses prerequisite to
advanced electives: V41.0200,
V41.0210, V41.0220, V41.0230.
Note: These courses should be taken
sequentially, with the exception that
V41.0210 may be taken concurrently with V41.0200 and V41.0230
may be taken concurrently with
V41.0220, if the major is begun
later than the second semester of the
freshman year.
Four advanced literature electives, distributed as follows: one
course in critical theories and methods; one elective in British literature
before 1800; and two electives from
any field of American and/or British
literature.
Four creative writing courses,
beginning with V41.0815. Note:
Registration in advanced workshops
requires permission of instructor and
is based on submission of writing
samples, which are due two weeks
before the beginning of the registration period for each term.
MINORS
Minor in English and American
literature: Any four courses in literature offered by the department.
Minor in creative writing: Any
four creative writing courses offered
by the department. V41.0815 may
only be taken once.
HONORS PROGRAM
The honors major offers the committed and capable student a special
opportunity for advanced study in
English. For students admitted to
the program after spring 2001, the
requirements consist of a junior honors seminar (either V41.0905 or
0906); a senior thesis, written on a
topic of the student’s choice in an
individual tutorial course
(V41.0925) and directed by a member of the Department of English
faculty; and a year-long colloquium
for thesis writers taken during the
senior year. Students should apply for
admission to the honors program
when they have no more than four
and no fewer than three semesters
until graduation. Applications are
available on the department’s undergraduate Web site and at the department offices.
RESTRICTIONS ON CREDIT
TOWARD THE MAJOR AND
THE MINOR
Independent study courses and
internships do not count toward any
of the department’s major or minor
programs. Transfer students must
complete at least half of the required
courses for the major and minor programs at the College.
C- is the lowest grade that may
be counted toward the major or the
minor, provided that the overall
grade point average in English courses, including the C-, is C or above.
Students must receive a C+ or better
in V41.0100 to proceed with the
major.
STUDY ABROAD
The Department of English encourages its majors to take advantage of
NYU’s many opportunities for study
abroad. The department’s Summer
in London program offers courses
that may be used to fulfill major
requirements, as well as courses in
British politics, creative writing, and
the history of British art and architecture. A list of non-English courses
offered by the various NYU Study
Abroad programs that may be counted toward the major can be found on
the department’s Web site each term.
English majors should consult a
departmental adviser before making
plans to study abroad.
STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS
English and Dramatic Literature
Organization: Students organize and
manage their own informal discussions as well as lectures, readings,
and parties. All students interested
in literature and drama, including
nonmajors, are welcome to participate. Faculty liaison: Professor Rust.
The Minetta Review: Students
are invited to submit creative work
in all literary genres and to apply for
membership on the staff of the literary magazine.
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97
Courses
ELECTIVES IN LITERATURE
The following courses are recommended to all students interested in
literature as a foundation for the
study of the humanities. English
majors may use these courses toward
their major requirement only by special permission of the director of
undergraduate studies except where
noted below. Prerequisite: fulfillment
of the College’s expository writing
requirement.
Major British Writers
V41.0060 Assumes no prior work in
literature. Recommended for majors in
other fields. 4 points.
Major writers of 19th to 20th centuries, including the romantic poetry
of Keats and Shelley, the industrialized British empire celebrated and
criticized in the works of Victorian
writers like Dickens and Tennyson,
to the modernist writers Eliot, Yeats,
and Joyce, Woolf, and contemporary
writers.
Major American Writers
V41.0065 Assumes no prior work in
literature. Recommended for majors in
other fields. 4 points.
Acquaints the student with major
texts in American literature as aesthetic achievements and as documents of dramatic points in the
development of American culture.
From the optimism of Emerson and
Thoreau and the darker anticipations
of Hawthorne and Melville to the
Civil War poetry of Whitman and
Dickinson, through the work of
Twain, Crane, and Dreiser to the
modernism of Eliot and Faulkner, literature has provided both the timeless pleasure of art and insight into
the historical moment.
Major British Novelists: Defoe to
Joyce
V41.0110 4 points.
Follows the development of the
British novel (texts vary), with particular attention to its historical context and its invention of new representations of the family, sexuality,
and the vicissitudes of British imperialism and the British class system.
Investigates how the novel form
functions both as entertainment and
as “education” and what impels
changes in its structure.
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Drama in Performance in
New York
V41.0132 Identical to V30.0300.
4 points.
Combines the study of drama as literary text with the study of theatre as
its three-dimensional translation,
both theoretically and practically.
Drawing on the rich theatrical
resources of New York City, approximately 12 plays are seen, covering
classical to contemporary and traditional to experimental theatre. On
occasion, films or videotapes of plays
are used to supplement live performances. Readings include plays and
essays in theory and criticism.
Film as Literature
V41.0170 Identical to V30.0501.
4 points.
The development of the film as a
major art form and its relationship to
other art forms. Particular attention
to the language of cinema, the director and screenwriter as authors, and
the problems of translating literature
into film, with extensive discussion
of the potentials and limitations of
each art form. Milestone films are
viewed and analyzed.
Writing New York
V41.0180 May be used by English
majors toward the requirement for an
advanced elective. 4 points.
An introduction to the history of
New York through an exploration of
fiction, poetry, plays, and films about
the city, from Washington Irving’s A
History of New York to Frank Miller’s
graphic novel The Dark Knight
Returns. Two lectures and one recitation section each week.
CORE COURSES FOR
MAJORS
Offered each term. Required of all
English majors. Open to nonmajors
who have fulfilled the College’s
expository writing requirement and
taken Conversations of the West
(V55.040X).
Literary Interpretation
V41.0200 Formerly V41.0100.
4 points.
Introduction to the interpretation of
literary texts. Teaches the student to
talk and write about literature.
Through study of the various forms
of poetry, the short story, the novel,
and the drama, students develop a
critical language and approach appro-
priate to the experience of each work.
Students must receive a grade of C+
or better in V41.0200 in order to
continue as English majors.
British Literature I
V41.0210 Prerequisite: V41.0200 or
equivalent approved by a departmental
adviser. 4 points.
Survey of English literature from its
origins in the Anglo-Saxon epic
through Milton. Close reading of
representative works, with attention
to the historical, intellectual, and
social contexts of the period.
British Literature II
V41.0220 Prerequisite: V41.0210 or
equivalent approved by a departmental
adviser. 4 points.
Survey of English literature from the
Restoration to the 20th century.
Close reading of representative works
with attention to the historical, intellectual, and social contexts of the
period.
American Literature I
V41.0230 Prerequisite: V41.0200 or
equivalent approved by a departmental
adviser. 4 points.
A survey of American literature and
literary history, from the early colonial period to the eve of the Civil
War. The goal is to acquire a grasp of
the expanding canon of American literature by reading both established,
canonical masterpieces and texts that
have been traditionally considered to
be marginal. Topics to be considered
include: the relation between history
and cultural mythology; the rise of
“literature” as a discipline unto itself;
the meaning of American individualism; the mythology of American
exceptionalism; the dialectic of freedom and slavery in American
rhetoric; the American obsession
with race; the ideology of domesticity and its link to the sentimental;
and the nature of the “American
Renaissance.”
ADVANCED ELECTIVES IN
LITERATURE
The following courses, with the
exception of the colloquia, are open
to all students who have taken
V41.0200. Additional prerequisites
are noted below where applicable.
Colloquia are open to qualified nonmajors only by special permission of
the director of undergraduate studies.
CRITICAL THEORIES AND
METHODS
Narratology
V41.0710 Appropriate for juniors and
seniors with some background in literature, literary theory, or theory of interpretation in a related field such as psychology, history, or anthropology. 4 points.
Examines the nature of discourse,
with focus on the novel and special
emphasis on contemporary critical
theory (e.g., semiotics, deconstruction) and the status of nonliterary
prose discourse (usually Freud) as
narrative in its own right. Readings
survey the history of English and
American fiction and critically examine the notion of literary history.
Major Texts in Critical Theory
V41.0712 4 points.
Major texts in critical theory from
Plato to Derrida, considered in relation to literary practice. The first half
of the course focuses on four major
types of critical theory: mimetic, ethical, expressive, and formalist. The
second half turns to 20th-century
critical schools—such as Russian and
American formalism, archetypal criticism, structuralism, psychoanalytic
criticism, feminism, reader theory,
deconstruction, and historicism.
Literature and Psychology
V41.0715 4 points.
Freudian and post-Freudian psychological approaches to the reading and
analysis of literary works. Covers
manifest and latent meaning, the
unconscious, childhood as a source of
subject matter, sublimation, and
gender and sexuality. Readings are
chosen from such writers as Emily
Brontë, Mary Shelley, Hawthorne,
Dostoyevsky, Dickens, Melville,
James, Woolf, and Faulkner.
Theory of Drama
V41.0130 Identical to V30.0130.
4 points.
Study of major issues in dramatic
theory, including the nature of imitation and representation, the relationship of text to performance, the idea
of dramatic genres, and the role of
the spectator. Each topic is studied
historically through analysis of classical texts such as Aristotle’s Poetics. A
long section of the course is devoted
to 20th-century dramatic theorists,
especially Brecht, Artaud, and Grotowski. Readings include both plays
and theoretical essays.
The Theory of the Avant-Garde,
East and West, 1890-1930
V41.0730 Identical to V29.0841 and
V91.0841. 4 points.
See description under Russian and
Slavic Studies (91).
Song of Roland, Chrétien de Troyes,
Arthurian romances, Marie de
France, Tristan and Isolde, Dante,
Boccaccio, Sir Gawain and the Green
Knight, Chaucer, Christine de Pisan,
and Malory.
Readings in Contemporary
Literary Theory
V41.0735 Identical to V29.0843.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Colloquium: Chaucer
V41.0320 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0210. 4 points.
Introduction to Geoffrey Chaucer’s
major poetry, with particular attention to The Canterbury Tales.
Chaucer’s language and versification
are studied briefly but intensively so
that students are able to read his
14th-century London dialect with
comprehension and pleasure. Special
critical attention is given to his narrative skills, methods of characterization, wide range of styles and forms,
and other rhetorical strategies.
Students are also encouraged to
explore Chaucer’s artistry as a reflection of late medieval social and cultural history.
Queer Literature
V41.0749 Identical to V97.0749.
4 points.
See description under Gender and Sexuality Studies (97).
Representations of Women
V41.0755 Identical to V97.0755.
4 points.
Selected readings in British and
American poetry and fiction provide
the focus for an exploration of
woman’s place in the writings of
such authors as Jane Austen, the
Brontës, George Eliot, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Virginia Woolf,
Edith Wharton, Emily Dickinson,
Kate Chopin, Willa Cather, Gertrude
Stein, Lillian Hellman, Doris Lessing, Sylvia Plath, Adrienne Rich,
and others.
LITERATURE BEFORE 1800
These courses carry a recommended
prerequisite of V41.0210, with the
exception of the colloquia, which
carry additional prerequisites.
Medieval Visionary Literature
V41.0309 4 points.
Using modern English translations
of both Latin and vernacular literary
texts written between the 6th and
14th centuries, we consider the
important role of visionary experiences in medieval culture. Beginning
with philosophical visionary poems,
such as Boethius’s The Consolation of
Philosophy, we then consider both
monastic and lay accounts of visionary experiences and the use of visions
in such vernacular poems as Piers
Plowman, Pearl, The Romance of the
Rose, and selections from works by
Dante and Chaucer.
Medieval Literature in
Translation
V41.0310 4 points.
Major texts and genres of the Middle
Ages, including Beowulf, Boethius,
Dante and His World
V41.0143 Identical to V65.0801 and
V59.0160. 4 points.
See description under Medieval and
Renaissance Studies (65).
The Renaissance in England
V41.0400 4 points.
Introduction to the major writers of
the 16th and early 17th centuries.
Such representative works as More’s
Utopia, Sidney’s Defense of Poetry,
Spenser’s Faerie Queene, and works
of the lyric poets from Wyatt to Sidney are studied as unique artistic
achievements within the cultural
crosscurrents of humanism and the
Reformation.
Shakespeare I, II
V41.0410, 0411 Identical to
V30.0225, 0226. Either term may be
taken alone for credit. 4 points per term.
Introduction to the reading of Shakespeare. Examines approximately 10
plays each term. The first term covers the early comedies, tragedies, and
histories up to Hamlet. The second
term covers the later tragedies, the
problem plays, and the romances,
concluding with The Tempest.
Colloquium: Shakespeare
V41.0415 Identical to V30.0230.
Assumes some familiarity with Shakespeare’s works. Beginning students should
take V41.0410, 0411. 4 points.
Explores the richness and variety of
Shakespearean drama through an
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intensive study of selected major
plays. Approximately six to eight
plays are read intensively and thoroughly examined in class.
17th-Century English Literature
V41.0440 4 points.
Introduction to the prose and poetry
of the 17th century—an age of spiritual, scientific, and political crisis.
Readings in Jonson, Donne, Bacon,
Herbert, Marvell, Milton, Browne,
and others.
Colloquium: The Renaissance
Writer
V41.0445 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0210. 4 points.
In-depth study of a major writer of
the Renaissance period. The writer to
be studied varies yearly. Consult online listing for current author.
Colloquium: Milton
V41.0450 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0210. 4 points.
Emphasis on the major poems—
Paradise Lost, Paradise Regained, and
Samson Agonistes—with some attention to the early poems and the
prose. Traces the poet’s sense of vocation, analyzes the gradual development of the Miltonic style, and
assesses Milton’s position in the history of English literature, politics,
and theology.
Restoration and 18th-Century
Literature
V41.0500 4 points.
The poetry, prose, and drama from
the Restoration of Charles II in 1660
to the death of Pope in 1744. Includes
such writers as Dryden, Rochester,
Defoe, Swift, Pope, Wycherley,
Etherege, Gay, Congreve, Behn, and
Richardson.
Restoration and 18th-Century
Drama
V41.0505 Identical to V30.0235.
4 points.
Development of English drama from
1660 to 1780, illustrating the comedy of manners (both sentimental and
laughing), the heroic play, and
tragedy. Playwrights include Dryden,
Wycherley, Congreve, Goldsmith,
and Sheridan.
The 18th-Century English Novel
V41.0510 4 points.
Study of the major 18th-century
novelists, including Defoe, Richardson, Fielding, Smollett, Sterne, and
Austen.
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English Literature of the 18th
Century
V41.0512 4 points.
Major works in poetry and prose that
deal with the act and life of writing
in a century considered the “age of
authors.” Authors include men of letters and the first “professional writers”: Dryden, Swift, Pope, Boswell,
Goldsmith, Johnson, Gibbon, and
others.
Colloquium: The 18th-Century
Writer
V41.0515 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0220. 4 points.
In-depth study of a single major
writer of the 18th century (e.g.,
Pope, Swift, Fielding, Johnson). The
writer to be studied varies yearly.
Consult on-line listing for current
author.
BRITISH LITERATURE AFTER
1800
These courses carry a recommended
prerequisite of V41.0220. with the
exception of the colloquia, which
carry additional prerequisites.
The Romantic Movement
V41.0520 4 points.
Representative works from the first
generation of romantics (Blake,
Coleridge, and Wordsworth), focusing on the influence of the French
Revolution and the themes of nature,
the self, and visionary poetry, as
expressed in new literary forms.
Analysis of selections from Byron,
Shelley, and Keats. The major
themes of their poetry—the meaning
of selfhood, humankind’s relation to
nature, and the poet’s role in society—against the larger background
of romantic, psychological, philosophical, and political thought.
Major British Writers: 1832-1870
V41.0525 4 points.
Readings in the major poets and
essayists of the Victorian period (Carlyle, Tennyson, the Brownings, Dickens, Arnold, Ruskin, and Swinburne), with emphasis on the crises
of ideas and society. Special attention
is given to writers’ invention of new
forms, or recovery of old ones, to
express the new issues of their changing age and psyches.
The English Novel in the 19th
Century
V41.0530 4 points.
The novels read are selected from the
works of Austen, Charlotte Brontë,
Emily Brontë, Dickens, Thackeray,
Trollope, and George Eliot.
English Literature of the
Transition: 1870-1914
V41.0540 4 points.
Survey of late Victorian and early
modern literature and a reassessment
of the notions of transition and
modernity. Readings include such
major novelists, essayists, and poets
as Hardy, Conrad, Joyce, Lawrence,
Woolf, Pater, Wilde, Strachey, and
Eliot.
Colloquium: The 19th-Century
British Writer
V41.0545 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0220. 4 points.
In-depth study of a single major
British writer of the 19th century.
The writer studied varies yearly.
Consult on-line listing for current
author.
Modern British and American
Poetry
V41.0600 4 points.
Readings from major modern American, British, and Irish poets from the
middle of the 19th century to the
1920s—specifically, from Whitman’s
Leaves of Grass (1855) to T. S. Eliot’s
The Waste Land (1922). Poets include
Whitman, Dickinson, Hardy, Hopkins, Yeats, Pound, Stevens, Frost,
Williams, and Eliot.
Contemporary British and
American Poetry
V41.0601 4 points.
Readings in modern American,
British, and Irish poets from 1922 to
the present. Poets include the middle
and later T. S. Eliot, Hart Crane, W.
H. Auden, William Empson, Dylan
Thomas, Robert Lowell, Elizabeth
Bishop, Charles Olson, John Ashbery, and others.
The British Novel in the 20th
Century
V41.0605 4 points.
Studies major 20th-century novelists,
including Joyce, Woolf, Conrad,
Lawrence, Forster, Pater, Strachey,
Hardy, Beckett, and others.
20th-Century British Literature
V41.0606 4 points.
Poetry, fiction, and drama since
World War I. Selected major texts of
modernism. Writers include Beckett,
Eliot, Forster, Pinter, Woolf, and
Yeats.
Contemporary British Literature
and Culture
V41.0607 4 points.
An introduction to contemporary
British fiction. Examines a range of
avant-garde, postcolonial, and “low”
texts that challenge received notions
of “Englishness.” Particular attention
is paid to the interaction between literature and other cultural forms such
as cinema, popular music, and sport.
Modern British Drama
V41.0614 Identical to V30.0245.
4 points.
Studies in the modern drama of England and Ireland, always focusing on
a specific period, a specific group of
playwrights, a specific dramatic
movement of theatre, or a specific
topic. Among playwrights covered at
different times are Shaw, Synge,
O’Casey, Behan, Osborne, Pinter,
Stoppard, Bond, Friel, Storey, Hare,
Adgar, Brenton, Gems, Churchill,
and Daniels.
The Irish Renaissance
V41.0621 Identical to V58.0621.
4 points.
Examines the extraordinary achievements of Irish writers during the
tumultuous period from the fall of
Charles Stuart Parnell, through the
Easter Rising in 1916, and into the
early years of national government in
the 1930s. Readings in several
genres—poetry, short story, novel,
drama—by Wilde, Yeats, Joyce,
Gregory, Synge, O’Casey, Beckett,
O’Brien, and others.
Colloquium: Joyce
V41.0625 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0220. 4 points.
Considers the imaginative “logic” of
James Joyce’s career and the extent to
which the trajectory of his works
constitutes a “development” of forces
posited in the early writings. Readings span the entire oeuvre, from
Dubliners to Finnegans Wake, and
include Joyce’s poetry and his play,
Exiles.
Irish Dramatists
V41.0700 Identical to H28.0603,
V30.0700, and V58.0700. 4 points.
See description under Irish Studies
(58).
Topics in Irish Literature
V41.0761 Identical to V58.0761.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies
(58).
Topics vary yearly. Recent topics
have included the ancient Celts, literature of pre-Norman Ireland, and
Irish women writers. Consult the
Department of English or the Program in Irish Studies for current
offering.
Topics in Irish Fiction and Poetry
V41.0762 Identical to V58.0762.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies
(58).
Topics in Irish Drama
V41.0763 Identical to V58.0763.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies
(58).
AMERICAN LITERATURE
These courses carry a recommended
prerequisite of V41.0230, with the
exception of the colloquia, for which
V41.0230 is a required prerequisite.
American Literature II
V41.0235 4 points.
Survey of American literature from
the Civil War to the present. Close
reading of representative works, with
attention to the historical, intellectual, and social contexts of the period.
Survey of the American Short
Story
V41.0240 Formerly V41.0135.
4 points.
Study of theme and technique in the
American short story through readings in Irving, Hawthorne, Poe,
Melville, James, Hemingway,
Faulkner, Porter, and others, including representative regional writers.
18th- and 19th-Century African
American Literature
V41.0250 Formerly V41.0709. Identical to V11.0159. 4 points.
Survey of major autobiographies, fiction, and poetry from the early
national period to the eve of the
New Negro Renaissance. Writers
considered include Olaudah Equiano,
Phillis Wheatley, Harriet Jacobs,
William Wells Brown, Frederick
Douglass, Frances E. W. Harper, and
Harriet Wilson.
20th-Century African American
Literature
V41.0251 Formerly V41.0160. Identical to V11.0160. 4 points.
Survey of major texts—fiction,
poetry, autobiography, and drama—
from Du Bois’s The Souls of Black
Folk (1903) to contemporaries such
as Amiri Baraka, Alice Walker, and
Toni Morrison. Discussion of the
Harlem Renaissance and its key figures, including Richard Wright,
James Baldwin, Langston Hughes,
and Ralph Ellison.
Contemporary African American
Fiction
V41.0254 Formerly V41.0162. Identical to V11.0162. 4 points.
Focuses on major novels by African
American writers from Richard
Wright’s Native Son (1940) to the
present. Readings include novels by
Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, and
Chester Hines as well as more recent
fiction by Ernest Gaines, John
Widerman, Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and others.
African American Drama
V41.0255 Formerly V41.0161. Identical to V11.0161 and V30.0255.
4 points.
Survey of major African American
dramatists of the past half century.
Readings include plays by Lorraine
Hansberry, Amiri Baraka, Ed
Bullins, Charles Gordone, James
Walker, Ntozake Shange, and
Charles Fuller.
Early American Literature
V41.0548 4 points.
Examines the large variety of writing
produced in North America between
1600 and 1800, from
indigenous/European encounters
through the American Revolution
and its aftermath. Genres discussed
in their cultural contexts include colonization, captivity, slave, and travel
narratives; sermons; familiar correspondence; autobiographies; poetry;
drama; and the novel.
19th-Century American Poetry
V41.0550 4 points.
A survey of 19th-century American
verse. Considers both popular (that
is, forgotten) and acknowledged
major poets of the period, with an
eye toward discerning the conventions that bind them to and separate
them from one another.
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101
American Romanticism
V41.0551 4 points.
Readings in Irving, Cooper, Poe,
Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne,
Melville, and Whitman. Lectures
emphasize their varying attempts to
reconcile “nature” with “civilization”
and to grant expression to instinct,
whim, and passion while preserving
the traditions and institutions that
hold society together. Various expressions of the nature/civilization conflict are considered: frontier/city;
America/Europe; heart/head; natural
law/social law; organic forms/traditional genres; and literary nationalism/the republic of letters.
Emerson, Whitman, Dickinson,
and Frost
V41.0555 4 points.
With the appearance of Emerson,
American literature entered a new
epoch. In departing from the New
England religious tradition, Emerson
redefined in transcendental terms the
ordering principle of the universe,
the nature of the self, and the work
of the poet. These concepts remain
central to the work of Whitman,
Dickinson, and Frost, who, in
responding to the issues Emerson
raised, explored the possibilities of a
genuinely native American poetry.
Some previous experience in reading
and writing about poetry is desirable.
American Realism
V41.0560 4 points.
In-depth study of the characteristic
work of Mark Twain, William Dean
Howells, Henry James, Emily
Dickinson, Stephen Crane, Frank
Norris, and Henry Adams. Emphasizes literary realism and naturalism
as an aesthetic response to the
changing psychological, social, and
political conditions of 19th-century
America.
Colloquium: The 19th-Century
American Writer
V41.0565 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0230. 4 points.
In-depth study of a single major
American writer of the 19th century
(e.g., Hawthorne, Poe, Melville,
Henry James). The writer studied
varies yearly. See the directory of
classes for current author.
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American Poetry from 1900 to
the Present
V41.0630 4 points.
Survey of the development of 20thcentury American poetry. A selection
of readings from such poets as
Robert Frost, Ezra Pound, T. S.
Eliot, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, Hart Crane, Theodore
Roethke, Sylvia Plath, Robert Bly,
and Denise Levertov.
American Fiction from 1900 to
World War II
V41.0635 4 points.
Close reading of fictional works by
Dreiser, Anderson, Stein, Hemingway, Dos Passos, Fitzgerald, West,
Wright, Hurston, Faulkner, and others. Studies the texts in light of traditional critical approaches and
recent developments in literary theory. Some of the perspectives that
enter into discussion of the texts are
the cultural and aesthetic background, the writer’s biography, and
the articulation of distinctively
American themes.
American Fiction Since World
War II
V41.0640 4 points.
Examination of representative works
by contemporary novelists. Authors
include Barthelme, Bellow, Ellison,
Gaddis, Hawkes, Mailer, Malamud,
Morrison, Nabokov, Oates, Pynchon,
Roth, Updike, and Walker.
Faulkner and Hemingway
V41.0645 4 points.
In-depth study of the major fiction
of Ernest Hemingway and William
Faulkner, emphasizing theme, style,
and contexts.
Modern American Drama
V41.0650 Identical to V30.0250.
4 points.
Study of the drama and theatre of
America since 1900, including
Eugene O’Neill, Susan Glaspell, the
Group Theatre, Thornton Wilder,
Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller,
Edward Albee, Sam Shepard, David
Mamet, Maria Irene Fornes, and
David Henry Hwang.
Modern British and American
Poetry
V41.0600 4 points.
See description under Advanced
Electives in British Literature after
1800, above.
Contemporary British and
American Poetry
V41.0601 4 points.
See description under Advanced
Electives in British Literature after
1800, above.
Colloquium: The Modern
American Writer
V41.0626 Additional prerequisite:
V41.0230. 4 points.
In-depth study of the work of a single major American writer. The
writer to be studied varies yearly. See
the class schedule for current author.
SPECIAL TOPICS
History of Drama and Theatre
V41.0125, 0126 Identical to
V30.0110, 0111. Either term may be
taken alone for credit.
4 points per term.
Examines selected plays central to
the development of Western drama,
with emphasis on cultural, historical,
and theatrical analysis of these works.
The first semester covers the following major periods in theatre: Greek
and Roman; medieval; English, Italian, and Spanish Renaissance; and
French neoclassical drama. The second semester begins with English
Restoration and 18th-century comedy and continues through romanticism, naturalism, and realism to an
examination of antirealism and the
major dramatic currents of the 20th
century.
Topics in Caribbean Literature
and Society
V41.0704 Identical to V11.0132 and
V29.0132. 4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Colonialism and the Rise of
Modern African Literature
V41.0707 Identical to V29.0850.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
South Asian Literature in English
V41.0721 Formerly Literature of
India. 4 points.
Explores the rich cross-cultural perspectives of 20th-century Indian
English literature. Moving from the
classic British writers about India
(Kipling and Forster) to the contemporary voices of Salmon Rushdie,
R. K. Narayan, Anita Desai, Bapsi
Sidhwa, Sarah Suleri, Vikram Seth,
Bharati Mukherjee, and others, the
course focuses on key experiences of
empire, partition of India and Pakistan, and diaspora. Themes of identity, memory, alienation, assimilation, and resistance, and encountering and crossing boundaries, define
culture, nation, and language in
complex interrelations and link Indian English literature to writing in
other colonial/postcolonial settings in
Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
Tragedy
V41.0720 Identical to V30.0200 and
V29.0110. 4 points.
Historical and critical study of the
idea and practice of tragedy from
ancient Greece to the present.
Comedy
V41.0725 Identical to V30.0205 and
V29.0111. 4 points.
Study of comic forms, themes, and
traditions from Aristophanes to the
present.
Science Fiction
V41.0728 Formerly V41.0140.
4 points.
Considers contemporary science fiction as literature, social commentary,
prophecy, and a reflection of recent
and possible future trends in technology and society. Writers considered
include Isaac Asimov, J. G. Ballard,
Octavia Butler, Arthur C. Clark,
Samuel Delany, Philip K. Dick,
William Gibson, Robert Heinlein,
Frank Herbert, Ursula K. Le Guin,
Neal Stephenson, and Bruce Sterling.
SEMINARS
All majors must take one of the following courses to fulfill the seminar
requirement.
These courses offer research, criticism, and class discussion in a seminar format. Topics and instructors
vary from term to term. Students
should consult the department’s online listing of courses to determine
what courses and what topics are
being offered each term. Prerequisites: V41.0200, V41.0210,
V41.0220, V41.0230.
Topics: Medieval Literature
V41.0950 4 points.
Topics: Renaissance Literature
V41.0951 4 points.
Topics: 17th-Century British
Literature
V41.0952 4 points.
Topics: 18th-Century British
Literature
V41.0953 4 points.
Topics: 19th-Century British
Literature
V41.0954 4 points.
Topics: 20th-Century British
Literature
V41.0955 4 points.
Topics: Early American Literature
V41.0960 4 points.
Topics: 19th-Century American
Literature
V41.0961 4 points.
Topics: 20th-Century American
Literature
V41.0962 4 points.
Topics: African American
Literature
V41.0963 4 points.
Topics: Emergent American
Literatures
V41.0964 4 points.
Topics: Transatlantic Literature
V41.0965 4 points.
Topics: Critical Theories and
Methods
V41.0970 4 points.
Topics: Dramatic Literature
V41.0971 4 points.
Topics: Genre Studies
V41.0972 4 points.
Topics: Interdisciplinary Study
V41.0973 4 points.
Topics: Poetry and Poetics
V41.0974 4 points.
Topics: World Literature in
English
V41.0975 4 points.
CREATIVE WRITING
COURSES
All creative writing courses are
applicable toward the minor in creative writing and toward the minimum requirements of the English
major with a specialization in writing. Enrollment in advanced workshops requires permission of the
instructor and is based on submission of writing samples. Applications
and deadline information are available each term on the department
Web site. With the exception of
V41.0815, these workshops may be
repeated for credit.
Creative Writing
V41.0815 Assumes no prior training in
creative writing. 4 points.
Beginning workshop in creative
writing designed to explore and
refine the student’s individual writing interests. Emphasis on poetry
and the short story. May only be
taken once.
Intermediate Workshop in
Fiction
V41.0816 Prerequisite: V41.0815.
4 points.
Intermediate workshop designed to
help students refine their approaches
to the writing of fiction through peer
critiques, craft readings, and individual conferences with the instructor.
Intermediate Workshop in Poetry
V41.0817 Prerequisite: V41.0815.
4 points.
Intermediate workshop designed to
help students refine their approaches
to the writing of poetry through peer
critiques, craft readings, and individual conferences with the instructor.
Advanced Workshop in Fiction
V41.0820 Prerequisites: V41.0815 or
equivalent and permission of the director
of undergraduate studies. Either term
may be taken alone for credit. 4 points.
Students work on their own stories
in consultation with the instructor.
Includes readings in classical and
contemporary fiction. Emphasis on
effective revision and on developing
a fruitful approach to evaluating the
work of others. Class discussion and
individual conferences.
Advanced Workshop in Poetry
V41.0830 Prerequisites: V41.0815 or
equivalent and permission of the director
of undergraduate studies. Either term
may be taken for credit. 4 points.
Aims to help the developing writer
of poetry discover his or her unique
voice and recognize and use that
voice with assurance and effect. The
various means include informal
group discussions, critical dialogue,
exercises in practical poetics, and
individual tutorials.
Advanced Workshop in
Playwriting
V41.0840 Identical to V30.084
Prerequisites: V41.0815 or equivalent
and permission of the director of undergraduate studies. 4 points.
Principles and practice of writing for
theatre. Students are expected to
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write and rewrite their own plays
and to present them for reading and
criticism.
HONORS COURSES
Junior Honors Seminar
V41.0905, 0906 Prerequisite: admission to the department’s honors program.
One seminar is required for honors
majors. 4 points.
Research, criticism, and class discussion in a seminar format. The subject—the works of a major writer or
writers, or a critical issue—varies
each term at the instructor’s choice.
A final paper of about 20 pages
prepares the student for the senior
thesis.
Senior Honors Thesis
V41.0925 Prerequisites: successful completion of either V41.0905 or 0906,
and permission of the director of undergraduate studies. 4 points.
To complete the honors program, the
student must write a thesis under the
supervision of a faculty director in
this individual tutorial course. The
student chooses a topic (normally at
the beginning of the senior year) and
is guided through the research and
writing by weekly conferences with
the thesis director. Students enrolled
in this course are also expected to
attend a year-long colloquium for
thesis-writers. Consult the assistant
director of undergraduate studies for
honors concerning the selection of a
topic and a thesis director. Information about the length, format, and
due date of the thesis is available on
the department’s Web site.
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INTERNSHIP
Internship
V41.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. Open to qualified junior and senior
English majors and minors but may not
be used to fulfill the minimum requirement of either the major or the minor. 2
or 4 points per term; 8 total internship
points are the department maximum.
Requires a commitment of 8 to 12
hours of work per week in an unpaid
position to be approved by the director of undergraduate studies. The
intern’s duties on-site should involve
some substantive aspect of literary
work, whether in research, writing,
editing, or production (e.g., at an
archive or publishing house, or with
a literary agent or an arts administration group). A written evaluation is
solicited from the intern’s supervisor
at the end of the semester. The grade
for the course is based on a final paper
submitted to the faculty director.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V41.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. May not duplicate the content of a
regularly offered course. Intended for
qualified junior and senior English
majors or minors but may not be used to
fulfill the minimum requirements of either
the major or the minor. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Requires a paper of considerable
length that should embody the result
of a semester’s reading, thinking, and
frequent conferences with the student’s director. It should show the
student’s ability to investigate, collect, and evaluate material, finally
drawing conclusions that are discussed in a sound and well-written
argument.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Juniors and seniors may take the following courses in the Graduate
School of Arts and Science with permission from the director of undergraduate studies.
Introductory Old English
G41.1060 4 points.
Study of the language, literature, and
culture of the Anglo-Saxons from
about A.D. 500 to 1066. Oral readings of the original texts begin in the
first week, along with a survey of
basic grammar. Representative prose
selections are read, but the emphasis
is on the brilliant short poems that
prepare the reader for the epic
Beowulf: poems like Caedmon’s
Hymn, The Battle of Maldon, The Seafarer, The Wanderer, and The Dream of
the Rood.
Introductory Middle English
G41.1061 4 points.
Study of representative prose and
verse texts from about A.D. 1100 to
1500, read in the original dialects.
The range is from the latest entries of
the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle to Malory, from The Owl and the Nightingale
to Sir Gawain and the Green Knight
and the Scottish Chaucerians.
Emphasis is on the continuity of
great literary traditions over the centuries and upon the variety of creative innovation.
CENTER FOR
European Studies (42)
L I L L I A N V E R N O N C E N T E R F O R I N T E R N AT I O N A L A F FA I R S , 5 8 W E S T 1 0 T H S T R E E T,
NEW YORK, NY 10011-8786. (212) 998-3838.
DIRECTOR OF THE
CENTER:
Professor Schain
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR:
Professor Gross
Faculty
T
he Center for European Studies offers an interdisciplinary major and minor in European studies focusing on contemporary patterns of politics, culture, and society as
well as on historical development in Europe. Both the major and minor are designed
for students seeking preprofessional training for careers in international business and
finance, diplomacy, international law, and cultural organizations dealing with Europe.
Although open to all students, the minor is especially suited to majors in European languages, history, or the social sciences. The center also offers a full program of colloquia and
workshops dealing with both Western and Eastern Europe, some of which are open to
undergraduate majors and minors.
2000-2002 Max Weber Chair for
German and European Studies:
Dubiel
Professors:
Gross (Politics), Schain (Politics)
Program
MAJOR
With the help of the European studies adviser, students prepare a preliminary program outline at the time
they declare their major. Although
there are no formal tracks, courses
are normally organized around the
interests of a student in one of two
ways: an emphasis on contemporary
European societies—their problems
and policies; or an emphasis on contemporary European cultures—their
ideas, values, and artistic and literary
trends. The program enables students to organize their courses
around a practical or theoretical
problem in contemporary European
society or culture that is applicable
to one or several countries. A typical
problem might include such subjects
as the changing impact of politics on
culture and social cleavages; changing patterns of religious expression
in Europe; literary expression and
Adjunct Professors:
Greenberg (European Studies),
Goldstein (European Studies),
Hambouz (European Studies)
Visiting Professor:
Del Boca (Economics and European
Studies)
changing society in Europe; the
European approach to urban problems; migration and ethnicity in
Europe; equality and inequality in
Europe; and democratic transition in
Europe. The problem, for which the
tools of several academic disciplines
should be applicable, will be the
basis for the major research project.
Majors in European studies must
have or attain an advanced level
knowledge of a major European language other than English (e.g.,
French, Spanish, Portuguese, Italian,
German, Russian). In order to prove
this knowledge students must successfully complete an advance level
language course. The alternative to
this is to have passed the CAS proficiency exam prior to graduation.
Nine courses that deal with Europe
are required: two in history (beyond
the introductory level); two in literature (preferably in the language of
The following positions are filled
every year by visiting faculty:
Visiting Consortium Professor and
Postdoctoral Fellow of European
Union Studies
specialization); two in the social sciences; two in philosophy, fine arts, or
cinema studies; and one senior honors seminar in European studies. The
senior seminar is interdisciplinary
and includes the requirement of a
major research project (or thesis). A
sequence of courses might begin
with two advanced history courses
and two literature courses in the
sophomore and/or junior years, followed by two social science and two
philosophy, fine arts, and/or cinema
studies courses. The interdisciplinary
seminar should be taken during the
first semester of the senior year.
Majors who entered the college in
fall 2000 and thereafter are required
to complete a semester abroad. Students may petition the director of
the center for exemption from this
requirement.
Students who fulfill the requirements of the major with an overall
EUROPEAN
STUDIES
•
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grade point average of at least 3.5
and at least 3.5 in European studies
will receive the B.A. degree with
“honors in European studies.” The
honors designation recognizes the
work beyond the normal course work
required of students in the senior
seminar and in the major research
project.
MINOR
All students minoring in West European studies must demonstrate proficiency in at least one West European
language above the intermediate
level (French, German, Italian, Portuguese, or Spanish). They must also
fulfill the following course requirements: one course in modern European history; one course in European
politics, anthropology, or economics
(V53.0150, V14.0111, or
V31.0224); and three additional
courses in at least two of the following areas: modern European history;
politics; anthropology; sociology;
economics; Hebrew and Judaic studies; and Italian, French, German, or
Spanish civilization. No more than
two of these courses may focus on
any one specific country. All course
programs must be designed in consultation with the center’s undergraduate program adviser.
B.A./M.A. PROGRAM
This new program offers qualifying
majors in European studies the
opportunity to earn both the B.A.
and the M.A. degrees in a shorter
period of time and at reduced tuition
cost. By taking some of their graduate requirements while still undergraduates, students can complete the
program in a maximum of five years.
In the graduate portion of the program, students receive a fellowship
that covers up to half of the tuition
for the courses required for the M.A.
European studies majors may
apply for admission to the program
after they have completed at least 32
points in the College and three
courses toward the major. Applications are reviewed by the Graduate
Admission Committee of the Center
for European Studies, using the normal criteria for the M.A. program,
except that applicants are not
required to take the GREs. The committee bases its decision on students’
undergraduate records and recommendations of NYU instructors.
106
•
EUROPEAN
A working knowledge at an
advanced level of a European language (other than English) is
required to complete the program,
and knowledge of a second European
language is encouraged. Students
must spend at least one semester in
an approved academic program in
Europe, normally during their junior
year. Students are also required to
write a senior honors thesis and master’s thesis (see below) to earn the
two degrees.
The program requires a total of
19 courses: nine undergraduate
courses and 10 graduate courses. For
the first four years, students focus
their work on a “problem area” that
will eventually become the subject of
their master’s thesis. The senior
honor’s thesis is an integrative project within the “problem area” developed by the student and his or her
adviser. It may be an expansion of a
research paper written for an undergraduate course. The graduate portion of the degree comprises three
tracks—Politics and Society, European Union Studies, and Humanities
and Cultural Trends—and students
must choose one of these by the
beginning of their fifth year. Of the
10 graduate courses, two are required
(one a graduate introductory history
course, the other a graduate research
seminar in European studies), and
two others must be chosen from the
graduate program’s “core” courses,
depending on which of the three
tracks the student chooses for specialization. Students are also required
to take five additional graduate
courses in their chosen track. An
internship, arranged and approved by
the center, is recommended as the
final course. With prior approval, a
student may take a graduate seminar
in lieu of an internship.
Each student’s program is organized with his or her adviser at the
time that he or she enters the program. The first draft of the thesis is
developed in the undergraduate Seminar on European Studies (V42.0300),
taken in the fall semester of the
fourth year. The master’s thesis is a
revision of this project and is further
developed in the graduate Research
Seminar (G42.3000), taken in the fall
semester of the fifth year. The M.A.
thesis must be defended at an oral
examination during the spring semester of the fifth year.
STUDIES
TIRES
For students who have an interest in
questions of immigration, CES offers
a special exchange program with four
European universities: The Universitaet van Amsterdam, Institut
d’Etudes Politiques de Paris, Université de Liège, and Europa-Universität
Viadrina, Frankfurt (Oder). The
TIRES program (Transnationalism,
International Migration, Race Ethnocentrism and the State) is a coherent
set of courses organized by each of
the European universities together
with workshops and seminars available to all students who participate.
Mobility and language learning
stipends are available to students
who qualify.
EUROSIM
EUROSIM is an annual model European Union simulation designed to
enhance students’ classroom knowledge of the workings of a politically
and economically integrated Europe.
The simulation exercise models the
legislative procedure of the European
Union from the introduction of a
draft resolution by the European
Commission to the acceptance (or
rejection) of an amended document
by the European Council.
Each year, New York State colleges and universities send a delegation of undergraduate students to
EUROSIM to represent one of the
member states of the European
Union and the European Commission. The legislation on which delegates work is focused on one main
theme chosen for its relevance to current European issues. Students individually play the roles of real-life
government ministers, members of
the European Parliament, and members of the Economic and Social
Committee and the Committee of
the Regions.
EUROSIM is held in alternating
years in the United States and in
Europe. In addition, several European universities send students to be
part of their respective member state
delegations alongside the American
students. In this way, U.S. students
receive a “home-grown” perspective
of the issues that they are debating.
Courses
The European Community: The
Political Economy of Contemporary Europe
V42.0166 4 points.
An investigation of the politics and
economics of European integration
since 1945. After examining major
historical developments, the course
focuses on a range of current issues,
including the impact of economic
integration on fiscal and monetary
policy, agriculture, industrial policy,
social policy and labor relations,
immigration, regional policy, and
the relationship of the European
Community to the larger world.
Western European Politics
V42.0510 Identical to V53.0510.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
British and Irish Politics
V42.0514 Identical to V53.0514 and
V58.0514. 4 points.
See description under Irish Studies
(58).
Government and Politics of the
Former Soviet Union
V42.0520 Identical to V53.0520.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Undergraduate Research Seminar
on Immigration and Politics in
Western Europe
V42.0300 Identical to V53.0595.
Prerequisite: permission of the instructor.
4 points.
Training for undergraduates interested in European studies in approaches
to research, in the sources and uses of
research materials on Europe, and in
the process of research.
Modern Greek Politics
V42.0525 Identical to V53.0525.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Eastern European Government
and Politics
V42.0522 Identical to V53.0522.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
EUROSIM Seminar
V42.0990 4 points.
Teaches the politics and policy of the
European Union to prepare students
for the annual interuniversity simulation conference held in alternating
years at the European Parliament in
Brussels and in New York State.
This course is part of the consortium
agreement concluded with Columbia
University.
EUROPEAN
STUDIES
•
107
Expository Writing Program (40)
269
DIRECTOR OF THE
PROGRAM:
Professor Hoy
ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF
THE PROGRAM:
Denice Martone
DIRECTOR OF FACULTY
DEVELOPMENT:
Darlene Forrest
DIRECTOR OF THE
WRITING CENTER:
Mary Wislocki
Courses
MERCER
S T R E E T,
NEW
YORK,
NY
10003-6687.
(212)
998-8860.
T
he Expository Writing Program (EWP) offers writing courses for students throughout the University as well as tutorial help in the Writing Center for the entire University community. All students (except those in the HEOP or C-Step program)
must complete Writing the Essay, V40.0100 (V40.0105 for Tisch School of the Arts students). Students in the Stern, Steinhardt, and Ehrenkranz Schools must complete a second
semester of writing, The Advanced College Essay, V40.0110 (Steinhardt) or V40.0115
(Stern); students in Tisch must complete The World Through Art, H48.0002. International students complete an International Sequence of writing courses. HEOP/C-Step students
must complete Prose Writing I and II, V40.0005 and V40.0006. Writing Tutorial,
V40.0013, provides additional work in writing.
The EWP faculty includes teaching assistants from across the University. The program is nationally recognized for faculty development and innovative teaching. Faculty
members regularly present their ideas at national conferences for writing teachers and conduct writing workshops throughout the world.
Writing the Essay
V40.0100 Required of all CAS, Stern,
Steinhardt, and Ehrenkranz freshmen
and transfer students who have not completed an equivalent course at another college. No exemptions. May not be taken on
a pass/fail basis. 4 points.
The foundational writing course in
expository writing. Provides instruction and practice in critical reading,
creative thinking, and clear writing.
Provides additional instruction in
analyzing and interpreting written
texts, the use of written texts as evidence, the development of ideas, and
the writing of both exploratory and
argumentative essays. Stresses exploration, inquiry, reflection, analysis,
revision, and collaborative learning.
Special sections for Tisch students
(V40.0105) focus on developing the
essay in the arts and require an additional plenary session.
108
•
EXPOSITORY
The Advanced College Essay:
Education and the Professions
V40.0110 Required of students in
Steinhardt and Ehrenkranz who have not
completed an equivalent course at another
college. No exemptions. Prerequisite:
V40.0100. May not be taken on a
pass/fail basis. 4 points.
Provides advanced instruction in
analyzing and interpreting written
texts from a variety of academic disciplines, the use of written texts as
evidence, the development of ideas,
and the writing of argumentative
essays. Stresses analysis, argument,
reflection, revision, and collaborative
learning. Tailored for students in
Steinhardt and Ehrenkranz so that
readings and essay writing focus on
issues that are pertinent to their
disciplines.
The Advanced College Essay:
Business and Its Publics
V40.0115 Required of students in
Stern who have not completed an equivalent course at another college. No exemp-
WRITING
tions. Prerequisite: V40.0100. May not
be taken on a pass/fail basis. 4 points.
Provides advanced instruction in
analyzing and interpreting written
texts from a variety of academic disciplines, the use of written texts as
evidence, the development of ideas,
and the writing of argumentative
essays. Stresses analysis, argument,
reflection, revision, and collaborative
learning. Tailored to allow students
in Stern to focus their essay writing
on the many interconnections among
business, society, politics, art, and
life.
International Writing Workshop:
Introduction
V40.0003 A preliminary course in college writing given for undergraduates for
whom English is a second language. May
either be required or waived, depending
on EWP assessment of writing proficiency. Permission to register also based on
tests and/or completed course work given
at the American Language Institute.
4 points.
Provides instruction in becoming a
writer and in considering audiences.
Emphasizes pre-writing strategies,
the analysis of experience, the development of ideas, and the importance
of both experience and idea in essays.
Introduces writing workshop concepts such as free writing, exploratory writing, reflective writing,
inquiry, revision, and collaborative
learning. Discusses appropriate conventions in English grammar and
style as part of instructor feedback.
International Writing Workshop I
V40.0004 Prerequisite: EWP permission. The first of two courses required for
students for whom English is a second
language. The MAP requirement for
NYU undergraduates is fulfilled with
this course and International Writing
Workshop 2. 4 points.
Provides instruction in critical reading, textual analysis, exploration of
experience, the development of ideas,
and revision. Stresses the importance
of inquiry and reflection in the use of
texts and experience as evidence for
essays. Reading and writing assignments lead to essays in which students analyze and raise questions
about written texts and experience,
and reflect upon text, experience,
and idea in a collaborative learning
environment. Discusses appropriate
conventions in English grammar and
style as part of instructor feedback.
International Writing Workshop II
V40.0009 Prerequisite: V40.0004.
The second of two courses required for students for whom English is a second language. The MAP requirement for NYU
undergraduates is fulfilled with this
course and International Writing Workshop I. 4 points.
Provides advanced instruction in
analyzing and interpreting written
texts from a variety of academic disciplines, the use of written texts as
evidence, the development of ideas,
and the writing of argumentative
essays through a process of inquiry
and reflection. Stresses analysis, revision, inquiry, and collaborative learning. Discusses appropriate conventions in English grammar and style
as part of instructor feedback.
A Spectrum of Essays
V40.0015 Formerly called Writing
Workshop III. Prerequisite: EWP permission. 4 points.
Provides advanced instruction in
essay writing. Emphasizes the development of analytical, reflective, and
imaginative skills that lead to
accomplished essays in any academic
discipline. Stresses curiosity and
investigates the relationship in a
written text between empirical evidence and thoughtfulness, inquiry
and judgment, and exploration and
decisiveness. The central business of
this workshop is writing compelling
academic essays.
Prose Writing I
V40.0005 Corequisite: Prose Writing
Workshop, E79.0631. Open only to students in the HEOP or C-Step program,
for which V40.0005, V40.0006, and
passing the Proficiency Examination fulfill the CAS expository writing requirement. 4 points.
Stresses principles of organization
and standards of clarity and coherence. Students receive the practical
assistance needed to formulate a
topic, select and organize subtopics,
and write orderly and clear expository essays. Effectiveness of expression
through the study of expository
styles (narration, description, definition, causal analysis, analogy, comparison, and contrast); exposure to
logical modes of thinking; and the
writing of full-length essays in these
expository modes. Emphasis is on
developing editing skills. Essay
material addresses a range of contemporary and debatable issues designed
to pique analytical thinking.
Prose Writing II
V40.0006 Corequisite: Prose Writing
Workshop, E79.0631. Open only to students in the HEOP or C-Step program.
4 points.
Emphasis on composing deductive
and inductive arguments and essays
of persuasion. Critical analysis of student essays and selected readings
develop the ability to apply expository modes to the writing of formal
arguments. Stresses a logical mode of
reasoning, the analysis and appropriate use of evidence, and the critical
assessment of logic and flaws in
logic. Emphasizes a clear sense of
style and purpose. The Proficiency
Examination must be taken at the
end of the course; those failing are
required to pass V40.0013.
Writing Tutorial
V40.0013 Offered on a pass/fail basis
only. 2 points.
Offers intensive individual and
group work in the practice of expository writing. Required of all students who fail the Proficiency Examination in writing. Those required to
take this course must pass it to fulfill
the College’s graduation requirement. Students who fail this course
may repeat it. Open to other interested students as space permits.
REQUIRED COURSES FOR
ESL STUDENTS
Workshop in College English
V40.0020 Equivalent to Workshop in
College English, Z30.9174, offered by
the American Language Institute (ALI).
Entrance by placement test only. Cannot
substitute for V40.0003, V40.0004,
V40.0009. 4 points.
Advanced Workshop in College
English
V40.0021 Equivalent to Advanced
Workshop in College English,
Z30.9184, offered by the American
Language Institute (ALI). Entrance by
placement test only. Cannot substitute for
V40.0003, V40.0004, V40.0009.
4 points.
PROFICIENCY
EXAMINATION
EWP administers the Proficiency
Examination. All students must pass
the examination to graduate, or, if
they fail, they must enroll in and
pass an additional writing course
(Writing Tutorial, V40.0013) to fulfill the graduation requirement. Students must take the examination at
least one year before they intend to
graduate.
EXPOSITORY
WRITING
•
109
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Fine Arts (43)
SILVER CENTER, 100 WASHINGTON SQUARE EAST, ROOM 303, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6688. (212) 998-8180.
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Sullivan
Faculty
Program
T
he Department of Fine Arts offers courses in the history and criticism of the visual
arts in major world cultures. Students at the introductory level examine art objects
and learn the basic critical and historical vocabulary through which these objects
may be understood and appreciated. At the advanced level, majors and nonmajors alike have
the opportunity to investigate aspects (e.g., style, iconography, patronage) of the arts in a
particular geographical area at a given historical time. This advanced work, in conjunction
with appropriate language training, provides a solid foundation for those who plan to go to
graduate school in preparation for a career in the arts (e.g., scholarship, teaching, museums,
writing).
The urban design and architecture studies program provides both a broad, humanistic perspective on the physical aspects of the city and preprofessional training for future
architects, city planners, public administrators, and writers on urban problems.
An internationally renowned faculty and a diverse group of students share the Grey
Art Library and Study Center, which includes lecture and seminar rooms, offices, a reference
library, and ample space for the study of visual materials.
Paulette Goddard Professor
Emeritus of the Arts and
Humanities:
Turner
Professors:
Weil-Garris Brandt, Hyman,
Krinsky, Landau, Rosenblum,
Sullivan
Helen Gould Sheppard Professor
of Art History:
Sandler
Associate Professors:
Connelly, Karmel, Silver
FINE ARTS MAJOR
course in Renaissance or baroque art
chosen from V43.0301-V43.0309,
V43.0311, V43.0313, and
V43.0315; (4) one 4-point advanced
course in modern art chosen from
V43.0401 and V43.0403-V43.0410;
(5) V43.0600; and (6) at least one
course in non-Western art chosen
from V43.0080, V43.0081,
V43.0084, V43.0091, V43.0092,
V43.0098, V43.0506, and
V43.0507. V43.0316 will count as a
Renaissance/baroque or a modern
course according to the material
Eight 4-point courses that normally
must include the following: (1)
either V43.0001 and V43.0002; or
V43.0001, V43.0300, and
V43.0400; or V43.0100, V43.0200,
and V43.0002; or V43.0100,
V43.0200, V43.0300, and
V43.0400 (if this option is chosen, a
total of nine courses must be taken);
(2) one 4-point advanced course in
ancient or medieval art chosen from
V43.0101-V43.0103 and V43.0201V43.0204; (3) one 4-point advanced
110
•
FINE
ARTS
Assistant Professors:
Flood, Geronimus, McKelway,
Smith
Lecturer:
Broderick
taught each semester. Any proposed
substitution must be discussed with
the chair prior to election of the
course in question. Students should
note that it is possible to concentrate
on architecture within the prescribed
areas.
Classics and fine arts major:
For details of this interdepartmental
major, refer to the description under
“Majors” in Classics (27).
MINOR IN FINE ARTS AND
URBAN DESIGN STUDIES
Any four 4-point courses in fine arts
and urban design studies that are not
mutually exclusive. The student may
not receive credit for V43.0001
(Western Art I) and V43.0100
(Ancient Art) or V43.0200
(Medieval Art); or V43.0002 (Western Art II) and V43.0300 (Renaissance Art) or V43.0400 (Modern
Art), as they overlap in introductory
material. Please be advised that the
introductory courses are required
prerequsites for any advanced level
courses.
MINOR IN STUDIO ARTS
FOR FINE ARTS MAJORS
AND URBAN DESIGN AND
ARCHITECTURE STUDIES
MAJORS
For many majors in fine arts and in
urban design studies, understanding
the field can be enhanced by the
experience of making art. It is valuable for such majors to be exposed to
the basic materials and methods of
the visual arts, both for the sake of
obtaining information about technical processes and for gaining a direct
appreciation of problems of form and
meaning as they are approached and
solved by artists. This minor is also
of practical value for fine arts or
urban design studies majors planning careers in museology, conservation, architecture, city planning, and
landmarks preservation.
The minor consists of six 3-point
courses, to be chosen from courses
offered by the Steinhardt School of
Education. Courses may be selected
from the following: required courses
(12 points): Introduction to Drawing,
Introduction to Sculpture, Introduction to Painting, and Introduction to
Photography or Introduction to
Printmaking; electives (6 points):
Fundamentals of 3-D Design and
Fundamentals of 2-D Design; Sculpture: Anatomy; and Projects:
Ceramics.
Students must have permission of
the Department of Art and Art Professions in the Steinhardt School of
Education, Barney Building, 34
Stuyvesant Street, 3rd Floor, to enroll
in the above courses. Any courses
taken toward a minor in studio art
must be approved by the Department of Fine Arts (CAS).
URBAN DESIGN AND
ARCHITECTURE STUDIES
PROGRAM
This program offers an interdisciplinary approach to urban design analysis and architecture studies. It consists of two introductory courses and
six core courses. Students select from
the program courses and from crossreferenced courses (see below) to
meet the requirements for the major.
There is an urban design and architecture studies minor consisting of
selected program courses (see below).
1. Urban design and architecture studies major: Eight 4-point
courses including (1) V43.0019 and
(2) V43.0021; (3) three from among
V43.0032, V43.0033, V43.0034,
V43.0036, V43.0037, V43.0301,
V43.0302, V43.0408, V43.0409,
V43.0622, V43.0702, V43.0997,
and V43.0998; (4) either V43.0600
on an architectural topic or any
urban design seminar (V43.0034,
V43.0037, V43.0622); and (5) two
additional courses selected from the
(#3) group just listed or from the following list.
Humanities: Fine Arts—
V43.0010, V43.0301, and
V43.0302.
Social sciences: Anthropology—
V14.0044 and V14.0322; Economics—V31.0227 and V31.0122; Metropolitan Studies—V99.0221 and
V99.0280; and Sociology—
V93.0460.
With departmental approval,
other courses in social sciences may
be substituted.
Under special circumstances, students are allowed to enroll for courses in the Graduate School of Arts
and Science and in the Robert F.
Wagner Graduate School of Public
Service. If these courses are credited
toward the undergraduate degree, no
advanced credit is allowed toward a
graduate degree.
2. Urban design and architecture studies minor: Four 4-point
courses.
3. Honors in urban design and
architecture studies: Students must
maintain a 3.5 overall grade point
average and an average of 3.5 in all
urban design and architecture studies
courses. They must take V43.0702
in their senior year. Each student
writes an honors thesis that is read
by a committee of three members of
the program faculty, who also
administer an oral examination. The
examining committee determines on
the basis of the student’s written and
oral performance whether or not to
recommend him or her for a degree
with honors.
4. Methods of examination in
urban design and architecture
studies courses: In most courses,
student research papers and analyses
replace quizzes and midterm examinations. Programs must be approved
each term by departmental advisers.
For courses, see this department’s
subheading, “Urban Design and
Architecture Studies Courses.”
GRANTING OF CREDIT
FOR FINE ARTS AND URBAN
DESIGN AND
ARCHITECTURAL STUDIES
MAJORS AND MINORS
Credit toward the fine arts major or
minor is granted only for courses
completed with a grade of C or
higher.
COURSES IN THE MORSE
ACADEMIC PLAN
Students planning to pursue a major
or minor program in fine arts are
advised to diversify their programs
through course work in Expressive
Culture. Note that V55.0720 cannot
be credited toward completion of any
major or minor program in fine arts.
Students who wish to include a field
study version of the course (V55.0721
or V55.0722) in their program must
secure the permission of the department chair prior to registration.
GRADUATION WITH
HONORS
A student who wishes to graduate
with departmental honors in fine arts
must have a minimum overall grade
point average of 3.5 and a 3.5 average in fine arts courses. Students
must apply to the chair of the
department to register for the
4-point Honors thesis course. Work
on the thesis must be done over the
course of two academic semesters.
Only a limited number of students
are encouraged to undertake the
Honors thesis. The thesis will be
read by a committee of three faculty
members and the student will have a
thesis defense at the end of the project. Writing the thesis will not
automatically guarantee graduation
with departmental honors. Honors
will be granted only to those theses
deemed worthy of extraordinary distinction by the faculty committee.
FINE
ARTS
•
111
Courses
INTRODUCTORY COURSES
New York is one of the most important centers of art in the world, and
the following courses take advantage
of the opportunities offered here.
Lectures are illustrated with slides.
No previous study is required for
admission to the following courses
unless a prerequisite is stated in the
description.
History of Western Art I
V43.0001 Students who have taken
V43.0100 or V43.0200 will not receive
credit for this course. 4 points.
Introduction to the history of painting, sculpture, and architecture from
ancient times to the dawn of the
Renaissance, emphasizing the place
of the visual arts in the history of
civilization. Includes the study of
significant works in New York
museums, such as the Metropolitan
Museum of Art, the Cloisters, and
the Brooklyn Museum.
History of Western Art II
V43.0002 Students who have taken
V43.0300 or V43.0400 will not receive
credit for this course. 4 points.
Introduction to the history of painting, sculpture, and architecture from
the early Renaissance to the present
day. Includes the study of significant
works in New York museums, such
as the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
the Frick Collection, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of
Modern Art.
The History of Photography as a
Fine Art
V43.0009 4 points.
Studies photography from the 1830s
to the present day, emphasizing style
and subject matter (rather than technical processes) in the work of the
major photographers. Considers how
photography has enlarged and affected our vision and knowledge of the
world and how photography and
modern art have influenced each
other.
History of Architecture from
Antiquity to the Present
V43.0019 4 points.
See description under this department’s subheading, “Urban Design
and Architecture Studies Courses.”
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FINE
ARTS
Shaping the Urban Environment
V43.0021 4 points.
See description under this department’s subheading, “Urban Design
and Architecture Studies Courses.”
Art and Architecture in SubSaharan Africa and the South
Pacific
V43.0080 4 points.
Survey of selected tribal art of West
and Central Africa and the South
Pacific. Although art from these
areas is popularly thought of in
terms of its impact on the West, the
art is primarily studied in relation to
its meaning and function in tribal
society, where art socializes and reinforces religious beliefs, reflects male
and female roles, and validates leadership. Films and field trips to a
museum and gallery supplement
classroom lectures.
Native Art of the Americas
V43.0081 4 points.
Major traditions in painting, sculpture, and architecture of the native
peoples of North America, Mexico,
Central America, and Andean South
America. Material from precontact
times through the 20th century.
Deals with questions of theory and
differences between Indian and
Western world views. Relationship
of the arts to shamanism, priesthoods, guardian spirits, deities, and
beliefs regarding fauna and flora.
Impact of European contact on
native arts and civilization. Focus
may vary according to the semester.
Introduction to Chinese Painting
V43.0084 Identical to V33.0084.
4 points.
Chinese painting represents one of
the world’s great pictorial traditions.
This chronological survey of major
schools and genres traces its long history from the earliest vestiges
revealed by archaeology up to the
present day. Examines such topics as
Chinese concepts of space, form, and
color; the functions of painting in
Chinese society; and individual
works’ social and personal meanings.
Asian Art I: China, Korea, Japan
V43.0091 Identical to V33.0091.
4 points.
An introduction to the art—and culture—of the Far East. The materials
are presented in a chronological and
thematic approach corresponding to
the major dynastic and cultural
changes of China, Korea, and Japan.
The course teaches how to “read”
works of art in order to interpret a
culture or a historical period; it aims
at a better understanding of the similarities and the differences among
the cultures of the Far East.
Asian Art II: From India to Bali
V43.0092 4 points.
As in V43.0091, students explore a
range of artistic centers from two
vast adjoining regions, in this case
South and Southeast Asia, both of
which include a wide variety of cultures. Includes monuments of Pakistan, India, Cambodia, and Indonesia. Although the two courses share
the same approach and are designed
to be complementary, either one may
be taken without the other.
Art in the Islamic World
V43.0098 Identical to V77.0891.
4 points.
Survey of Islamic art in Iran, Syria,
Egypt, Turkey, North Africa, Spain,
and India, including architectural
monuments, their structural features
and decoration, and outstanding
examples of the decorative arts in all
the various media—pottery, metalwork, textile and carpet weaving,
glass, and jewelry. Visits to the Metropolitan Museum of Art to discuss
selected problems while viewing the
originals.
Ancient Egyptian Art
V43.0099 4 points.
Traces developments in the sculpture, painting, and architecture of
ancient Egypt from pre-dynastic
beginnings through the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms (3100-1080
B.C.). Special emphasis on Egyptian
art in the context of history, religion,
and cultural patterns. Includes study
of Egyptian collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
Brooklyn Museum.
Ancient Art
V43.0100 Students who have taken
V43.0001 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
History of art in the Western tradition from 20,000 B.C. to the 4th century A.D. From the emergence of
human beings in the Paleolithic Age
to the developments of civilization in
the Near East, Egypt, and the
Aegean; the flowering of the Classi-
cal Age in Greece; and the rise of the
Roman Empire to the beginnings of
Christian domination under the
Emperor Constantine in the 4th century A.D. Study of the collections of
the Metropolitan Museum of Art and
the Brooklyn Museum is essential.
and painting, and modernism in
architecture in the 20th century.
After World War I, Dadaism and
Surrealism. Developments since
1945, such as Action painting, Op,
Pop, Minimal art, and the New
Realism.
Medieval Art
V43.0200 Students who have taken
V43.0001 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
Art of Western civilization between
Constantine and the Renaissance
(300 to 1500 in northern Europe,
1400 in Italy). Topics: Christian
beliefs underlying medieval art.
Acceptance and rejection of classical
tradition and the roles of nonclassical
traditions in medieval art. Stylistic
transformations in medieval art in the
context of medieval society. Development of abbey and cathedral, monumental sculpture and painting,
mosaics, stained glass, and fresco as
well as manuscript illumination,
ivories, metalwork, and panel
painting.
Expressive Culture: Images—
Painting and Sculpture in New
York Field Study
V55.0721 Students who have taken
V43.0007 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
For a description of this course, see
under Foundations of Contemporary
Culture (55).
Renaissance Art
V43.0300 Students who have taken
V43.0002 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
The Renaissance, like classical antiquity and the Middle Ages, is a major
era of Western civilization embracing a multitude of styles. It is, however, held together by basic concepts
that distinguish it from other periods. Main developments of Renaissance art both in Italy and north of
the Alps: the Early and High
Renaissance; relation to the lingering
Gothic tradition; and Mannerism.
Emphasis on the great masters of
each phase. In conclusion, the survival of Renaissance traditions in
Baroque and Rococo art may be
examined.
Modern Art
V43.0400 Students who have taken
V43.0002 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
Art in the Western world from the
late 18th century to the present. The
Neoclassicism and Romanticism of
David, Goya, Ingres, Turner,
Delacroix; the realism of Courbet;
the Impressionists; parallel developments in architecture; and the new
sculptural tradition of Rodin. From
Postimpressionism to Fauvism,
Expressionism, Futurism, Cubism,
geometric abstraction in sculpture
Expressive Culture: Images—
Architecture in New York Field
Study
V55.0722 Students who have taken
V43.0010 will not receive credit for this
course. 4 points.
For a description of this course, see
under Foundations of Contemporary
Culture (55).
URBAN DESIGN AND
ARCHITECTURE STUDIES
COURSES
History of Architecture from
Antiquity to the Present
V43.0019 4 points.
Introduction to the history of Western architecture emphasizing the formal, structural, programmatic, and
contextual aspects of selected major
monuments from ancient times to
the present. Monuments discussed
include such works as the Parthenon,
the Roman Pantheon, Hagia Sophia,
the cathedral at Chartres, Alberti’s S.
Andrea in Mantua, St. Peter’s, Palladio’s Villa Rotonda, St. Paul’s Cathedral, Versailles, the London Crystal
Palace, Frank Lloyd Wright’s
Fallingwater, Le Corbusier’s Villa
Savoye, Mies van der Rohe’s
Barcelona Pavilion, and others. Lectures analyze monuments within
their appropriate contexts of time
and place. Also considers aspects of
city planning in relation to certain
monuments and to the culture and
events of their time.
Shaping the Urban Environment
V43.0021 Identical to V99.0320.
4 points.
Students investigate the city in
terms of architectural history, engineering, and urban planning. Topics:
historical types and shapes of cities;
factors influencing our current urban
scene; architectural form as expression of political systems; discussions
of urban design and architecture
problems in the contemporary world;
and the role of technological factors
such as construction and transportation systems. Students are given projects in conjunction with class.
Decision Making and Urban
Design
V43.0032 Identical to V99.0321.
Prerequisite: V43.0021 or permission of
the program director. 4 points.
The impact and limitations of private and public decision-making
power on urban design and architecture. City architecture in light of the
values and priorities set by a society.
Recognition of citizens’ groups as
increasingly important factors in city
planning and related changes. Critically evaluates the complexity of
decision making and historical circumstances as related to the built
urban environment on the basis of
historical and modern American and
European examples.
Cities in History
V43.0033 Identical to V99.0323.
Prerequisite: V43.0021 or permission of
the instructor or program director.
4 points.
Historical survey of city types, plans,
and symbolic meanings from classical Greece to the present. Subjects
include ancient towns and planned
cities, especially those of the Roman
Empire; medieval commercial centers and cathedral towns; Renaissance
plazas and baroque street systems;
19th-century industrial, colonial,
and resort cities; and utopian and
actual modern plans. Emphasis on
European and American cities. Discusses London, Paris, and Rome
throughout.
Environmental Design: Issues
and Methods
V43.0034 Identical to V99.0322.
Prerequisite: V43.0021 or permission of
the instructor. 4 points.
On the basis of selected topics,
examines the manifold technological
considerations that affect urban
building and urban environmental
quality in the city of today. Topics
include the specifics of power supply,
heating, lighting, ventilation, internal traffic (vertical and horizontal),
pollution control, and other topics of
immediate significance. Focuses on
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the potentials of technology to resolve
urban environmental problems.
Urban Design and Health
V43.0036 Prerequisite: V43.0021 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Architecture of modern cities, planning procedures, and technology in
terms of their relationship to public
health. Topics: building legislation;
sanitary engineering; problems of
pollution engendered and solved;
design of mass housing; design of
hospitals, including contemporary
controversies and community participation; design and psychological disorder; and medical fact and theory
and their relationship to architectural
design.
Urban Design and the Law
V43.0037 Prerequisite: V43.0021 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Relationship between physical surroundings and the basis of society in
law. Examines the effects of zoning
laws and building codes; urban
renewal legislation; condemnation
procedures; real estate law; law concerning tenants; taxation; special
bodies such as the Port Authority of
New York and New Jersey; preservation and landmarks; licensing
procedures for architects, engineers,
and planners; and pollution control
measures. Special attention to
laws of New York City and nearby
communities.
Greek Architecture
V43.0104 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
Roman Architecture
V43.0105 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
European Architecture of the
Renaissance
V43.0301 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
Architecture in Europe in the
Age of Grandeur
V43.0302 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
Early Modern Architecture: The
19th Century
V43.0408 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
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20th-Century Architecture
V43.0409 4 points.
See this department’s subheading,
“Advanced Courses in Fine Arts.”
Senior Seminar
V43.0600 Prerequisite: written permission of the chair. Open to fine arts majors
and urban design and architecture majors
who have completed five 4-point courses in
appropriate areas. 4 points.
Seminar in Urban Options for the
Future
V43.0622 Prerequisite: V43.0034 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Focuses on alternative futures for the
city of tomorrow that may be effected through the development of new
forms of technology and the utilization and exploitation of the state of
the art in urban structural designs.
Topics: redesign of the business district; recovery of city resources; and
social, political, and economic implications of new city forms considered
in projections for a new urban face.
Senior Thesis: Urban Design and
Architecture Studies
V43.0702
For general requirements, see under
Senior Thesis, V43.0700.
Independent Study in Urban
Design and Architecture Studies
V43.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: written
permission of one of the directors of the
program. 2 or 4 points per term.
ADVANCED COURSES IN
FINE ARTS
Archaic and Classical Art: Greek
and Etruscan
V43.0102 Identical to V27.0312.
Prerequisite: V43.0001, V43.0100, or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Greek and Etruscan art from the 7th
century through the 4th century B.C.,
including the orientalizing and
archaic styles, the emergence of the
classical style, changes in art and life
in the 4th century, and the impact
of Macedonian court art under the
conquests of Alexander the Great.
Studies architecture, sculpture, and
vase painting within their historical
and cultural contexts. Includes study
of the Metropolitan Museum of Art
collections.
Hellenistic and Roman Art
V43.0103 Identical to V27.0313.
Prerequisite: V43.0001, V43.0100, or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Traces developments in art from the
conquests of Alexander the Great to
the beginnings of Christian domination under Constantine in the 4th
century A.D. Includes Macedonian
court art; the spread of Hellenistic
culture from Greece to the Indus
Valley; the art of the Ptolemaic,
Attalid, and Seleucid kingdoms; the
expansion of Rome in the western
Mediterranean; and the art of the
Roman Empire. Special emphasis on
problems of chronology, choice of
styles, and copies. Study of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Brooklyn Museum collections essential.
Greek Architecture
V43.0104 Identical to V27.0353.
Prerequisite: V43.0001, V43.0100, or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
History of Greek architecture from
the Archaic through the Hellenistic
periods (8th-1st centuries B.C.). Provides a chronological survey of the
Greek architectural tradition from
its Iron Age origins, marked by the
construction of the first all-stone
temples, to its radical transformation
in the late Hellenistic period, most
distinctively embodied in the
baroque palace architecture reflected
in contemporary theatre stage-buildings. The lectures (and accompanying slides) and readings present the
major monuments and building
types, as well as such related subjects
as city planning and urbanism,
building methods, and traditions of
architectural patronage.
Roman Architecture
V43.0105 Identical to V27.0354.
Prerequisite: V43.0001, V43.0100, or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
History of Roman architecture from
the Hellenistic to the Early Christian
periods (1st century B.C.-6th century
A.D.). Provides a chronological survey
of Roman architecture from its early
development against the background
of the Greek and Etruscan traditions
to the dramatic melding of the divergent trends of late antiquity in the
great Justinianic churches of Constantinople and Ravenna. The lectures (and accompanying slides) and
readings present the major monuments and building types, as well as
such related subjects as city planning
and urbanism, Roman engineering,
and the interaction between Rome
and the provinces.
Art of the Early Middle Ages
V43.0201 Prerequisite: V43.0001,
V43.0200, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The art of Christian Europe and Asia
Minor between Constantine and the
beginning of the Romanesque (3001000). Successive phases of early
medieval art: Early Christian, Insular
and Merovingian, Carolingian and
Ottonian. Sources of medieval art in
the late classical world; acceptance,
rejection, and revival of the classical
tradition; and the role of Rome,
Byzantium, the outlying provinces of
the Empire, and the nonclassical traditions of the Orient and the migrations peoples in the evolution of
style.
Romanesque Art
V43.0202 Prerequisite: V43.0001,
V43.0200, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The art of Europe from about 10001200. Considers the mingling of
classical, Byzantine, Oriental, and
Migrations elements to create a new
style around the year 1000. Topics:
the revival of large-scale architecture;
development of monumental sculpture; the abstract character of
Romanesque imagery in painting,
sculpture, and the minor arts;
Romanesque symbolism and fantasy;
the spread of Romanesque style
throughout Europe; the roles of
monastic orders, pilgrimages, and
the Crusades; late phase; and the
transition from Romanesque to
Gothic in the 12th century.
Gothic Art in Northern Europe
V43.0203 Prerequisite: V43.0001,
V43.0200, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Art of northern Europe from the
12th to the 15th century. Concurrent
phases of late Romanesque and early
Gothic during the 12th century;
transitional Gothic ca. 1200; High
Gothic in the 13th century; late
Gothic painting and sculpture to ca.
1420; and architecture to the end of
the 15th century. Topics: the cathedral, Gothic art and religion, secularization of Gothic art, and Gothic
naturalism. Effects of growth of
cities, universities, mendicant orders,
and the role of nobility and bourgeoisie in Gothic art. Spread of
Gothic style outside the Île-de-France.
Art and Architecture in the Age
of Giotto: Italian Art 1200-1420
V43.0204 Prerequisite: V43.0001,
V43.0200, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Art of Italy between 1200 and 1420,
intersecting with the Gothic in
northern Europe. Applicability of the
term “Gothic” in relation to Italian
art from antiquity and the Italian
contacts with northern Europe.
Development of sculpture; painting;
and the emergence of artistic personalities, such as Pisani, Giotto, and
Duccio. The communal projects of
Italian cities, regional styles, and the
relations among them. Italian art in
the late 14th century, including
effects of the Black Death, the international style, and the artistic situation before the Renaissance.
European Architecture of the
Renaissance
V43.0301 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0019, V43.0300, or permission of
the instructor. 4 points.
The new style in architecture
sparked by the buildings of
Brunelleschi and the designs and
writings of L. B. Alberti, developed
in 15th-century Florence against the
background of a vigorously evolving
humanist culture. A study of the
new movement through the great
quattrocento masters and the work of
the giants of the 16th century (e.g.,
Bramante, Michelangelo, Palladio)
and the spread of Renaissance style
into other countries.
Architecture in Europe in the
Age of Grandeur (The Baroque)
V43.0302 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0019, V43.0300, or permission of
the instructor. 4 points.
Beginning with the transformation
of Renaissance architecture in
counter-Reformation Rome, the
course examines the succeeding
European Baroque styles. Includes
High Roman Baroque of Bernini and
Borromini, Piedmont, the richly
pictorial late Baroque of Germany
and Austria, and the baroque classicism of France and England in the
work of such architects as J. H.
Mansart and Sir Christopher Wren.
Metamorphosis of the various
Baroque styles into Rococo, concluding with the mid-18th century and
roots of Neoclassicism.
The Century of Jan van Eyck
V43.0303 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The course addresses 15th-century
painting north of the Alps—partly
late medieval, partly Renaissance.
Examines connection of breathtaking
technique and deeply religious
aspects of the art to function, symbolic thought, issues of patronage,
and changes in the society to which
painting was related. Also explains
ways in which history is written
when most of the vital documents
are missing or destroyed.
16th-Century Art North of the
Alps
V43.0304 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
This course concentrates on the masters of 16th-century art in northern
Europe: Durer, Grünewald, Holbein,
Cranach, Altdorfer, Baldung Grien
in Germany; Metsys, Lucas van Leyden, Bruegel and others in the
Netherlands; and, briefly, the artists
of the “Fontainebleu School” in
France. The development of printing
and the graphic arts, the relation of
the art of this period to earlier traditions in the North, to Italy, to the
Reformation, and to the art markets,
are subjects that are also considered,
as is the work of minor but still significant artists.
Italian Renaissance Sculpture
V43.0305 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The role of sculpture in the visual
arts in Italy from ca. 1400 to 1600,
primarily in central Italy, is studied
through intensive examination of
major commissions and of the sculptors who carried them out. Earlier
meetings focus on Donatello and his
contemporaries including Ghiberti,
Quercia, Verrocchio, and Pollaiuolo.
Thereafter, the course explores
Michelangelo’s sculpture and compares his work with those of his contemporaries and followers ending
with Giambologna.
Early Masters of Italian
Renaissance Painting
V43.0306 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Achievements of the chief painters of
the 15th century studied through
their major artistic commissions.
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Special attention is given to the Tuscan tradition. A brief introduction to
Giotto and his time provides background for the paintings of Masaccio
and his artistic heirs (Fra Angelico,
Filippo Lippi, Piero della Francesca,
etc.). Topics include the role of pictorial narrative, perspective, and mimesis; the major techniques of Renaissance painting and its relation to the
other visual arts. In the later 15th
century, social and cultural changes
generated by power shifts from
Medici Florence to Papal Rome also
affected art patronage, creating new
tensions and challenges for artists,
and fostering the emergence of new
modes of visualization.
The Age of Leonardo, Raphael,
and Michelangelo
V43.0307 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Painting in Florence and Rome from
about 1490 to later decades of the
16th century. From a study of selected
commissions by Leonardo, Raphael,
Michelangelo, Fra Bartolommeo, and
Andrea del Sarto, we go on to investigate new pictorial modes emerging
before 1520 in Pontormo, Rosso,
Parmigianino, Giulio Romano, and
other members of Raphael’s school;
we consider their younger contemporaries and successors including
Bronzino and Vasari. The course
emphasizes the patronage, symbolic
tasks, and functions of Renaissance
painting and critically examines historical concepts such as High Renaissance, Mannerism, and Maniera.
The Golden Age of Venetian
Painting
V43.0308 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The art of Venice and its surroundings, Emilia, and Lombardy. Covers
Giorgione, the young Titian, Sebastiano del Piombo, and their profound
impact in Venice and related centers;
Correggio’s artistic experiments,
their origins and implications.
Examines in-depth the achievements
of Titian and their significance for
his contemporaries. Veronese, Tintoretto, Bassano, and, in the 18th
century, Tiepolo, bring Venice’s
golden age to a close. Stresses artistic
reciprocity between northern and
central Italy.
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Italian Art in the Age of the
Baroque
V43.0309 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The new realism and eclecticism of
the three Carracci and Caravaggio in
Bologna and Rome shortly after
1580. Other members of the Bolognese school after 1600. The peak of
the Baroque style associated with
Pope Urban VIII in the sculpture of
G. L. Bernini. Rome as the art capital of Baroque Europe; the diversity
of its international community. Neoclassical trends; the art of Poussin
and Claude Lorrain.
Dutch and Flemish Painting
1600-1700
V43.0311 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
In Antwerp, Rubens overturned all
previous concepts of painting. The
first to deserve the term “baroque,”
he dominated Flanders. Van Dyck,
his pupil, took the Rubens style to
England. Dutch painters, including
Hals, Rembrandt, and Vermeer,
moved in a different direction using
every aspect of their country and
society: the peasant, the quiet life of
the well-ordered household, the sea
and landscape, views of the cities,
and church interiors.
French Art: Renaissance to
Rococo (1520-1770)
V43.0313 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Arrival of the Italian Renaissance in
France during the reign of Francis I
and the completion of the palace at
Fontainebleau. The revival of art
around 1600, after the religious wars
of the Reformation. The impact of
Caravaggio in France, Poussin and
Claude Lorrain in Rome, and other
painters in Paris (e.g., Vouet, Champagne, Le Nain). Artistic splendors
of the court of Louis XIV at Versailles. The Rococo of Watteau,
Chardin, Boucher, and Fragonard.
Art in Spain from El Greco to
Goya
V43.0315 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Begins with El Greco (1541-1614)
in Italy and Toledo. Discussion of
17th-century Spanish art focuses on
painters in the major centers of
Seville (Zurbarán, Murillo, Valdés
Leal); Madrid (Velázquez); and
Naples (Ribera). Attention then
focuses on Goya, who emerged from
a style influenced by Italian art (e.g.,
Tiepolo) to dominate later 18th- and
early 19th-century painting.
Topics in Latin American Art:
Colonial to Modern
V43.0316 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0300 and V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Focuses on particular trends, movements, and individuals in the art of
Latin America from the 16th to the
20th century. This course is not a
survey; it attempts to situate works
of art within their social, historical,
and theoretical contexts. Chronological focus of this course may vary
from term to term.
European and American Decorative Arts: Renaissance to Modern
V43.0317 Prerequisites: V43.0002,
V43.0300 and V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
History of the design of the objects
used in daily life. Studies works of
art in social and historical context.
Beginning with the Italian, French,
and northern Renaissance, surveying
the “Louis” styles in France, international Neoclassicism, and the Victorian style, the course concludes with
the modern period. Stresses the history of furniture, although the course
also covers glass, silverware, tapestries, ceramics, wallpaper, carpets,
and small bronzes.
Neoclassicism and Romanticism
V43.0401 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Anti-Rococo developments in terms
of Neoclassic reform, new moralizing
tendencies, and the dissolution of
earlier traditions. Special attention to
Goya, David, and the Romantic
aspects of Neoclassicism as seen in
Canova and Ingres. Covers Romanticism in the art of England, Germany,
and France, with attempts to distinguish national characteristics in masters like Blake, Friedrich, and
Delacroix. The development of
Romantic landscape painting from
its 18th-century origins through
such artists as Constable, Turner, and
Corot.
Realism and Impressionism
V43.0403 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Survey of the Romantic background
to the programmatic Realism of the
1840s; leaders of the Realist reform
such as Courbet, Daumier, and the
Pre-Raphaelites; Realist manifestations in Germany and Italy; and the
development of Manet as a pivotal
figure. Emergence of the Impressionist aesthetic in the 1860s. The unity
and diversity of the Impressionist
movement are considered in the
works of Monet, Degas, Pissarro, and
Renoir.
American Art
V43.0404 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Examines the art that developed in
what is now the United States, from
the beginnings of European colonization until World War I and the
internationalizing of American art.
Includes painting and architecture,
concentrating on the work of Copley,
Cole, Winslow Homer, Mary Cassatt,
and others. New York City provides
major collections of painting and
sculpture as well as outstanding
examples of architecture.
Modern Art from Postimpressionism to Expressionism
V43.0405 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Brief discussion of the nature of
Impressionism and reactions to it in
the 1880s, including the art of Seurat and his Neoimpressionist followers, Cézanne, Gauguin and the
Symbolists, and Van Gogh. Later
19th-century French artists, such as
Toulouse-Lautrec, Vuillard, and Bonnard are contrasted with such nonFrench artists as Hodler, Munch,
Ensor, and Klimt. Art Nouveau and
sculptural trends around 1900. The
rise of Expressionism in Germany
and France, with special attention to
the Fauves, Matisse, and the artists of
the Brücke.
Cubism to Surrealism
V43.0406 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Begins with a study of the creation
of Cubism by Picasso and Braque
and considers the international consequences of this style in painting
and sculpture, including Italian
Futurism. Also traces the evolution
of Abstract art, with emphasis on
Kandinsky and Mondrian. Antirational currents, from Dada to Surrealism, are analyzed, with special
attention paid to Duchamp and to
Picasso’s art of the 1920s and 1930s.
Also surveys the “conservative”
trends of Neoclassicism, Neue Sachlichkeit, and Magic Realism.
Abstract Expressionism to Pop
Art
V43.0407 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Begins with European and American
art of the post-World War II era,
paying special attention to Dubuffet,
Pollock, De Kooning, and the emergence of Astract Expressionism. Continues by examining the diverse
American reactions to Abstract
Expressionism, culminating in the
emergence of Pop and Minimalism in
the 1960s; special attention is paid
to Rauschenberg, Johns, and Warhol.
European, Latin American, and
Japanese developments of the 1960s
and early 1970s are also surveyed.
Contemporary Art
V43.0410 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
The headlong evolution of modern
art towards an irreducible minimum
comes to an end some time around
1972 with the virtual disappearance
of traditional painting or sculpture.
The defining feature of contemporary
art, therefore, is that it is art made
after “the end of art.” This course
begins with a brief review of the
1950s and 1960s, and then focuses
on the feminist art of the 1970s,
which introduces new themes of
craft, community, decoration, identity, and the “gaze.” Examines developments such as the institutional critique, appropriation, commodification, graffiti, abjection, and the
“informe.” The rebirth of painting in
the 1980s sets the stage for revivalist
movements such as Neoexpressionism and neo-geo. The 1990s witness
the overthrow of the modernist ban
on narrative and allegory. We conclude by examining the role of
installation as a new “International
Style,” bringing the real world into
the art gallery.
Early Modern Architecture: The
19th Century
V43.0408 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, V43.0010, V43.0019,
V43.0021, or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Focusing on the creation of modern
building types such as the bank,
state capitol, museum, railroad station, and skyscraper, the course
begins in the later 18th century with
the idealistic designs of Ledoux and
Boullée. After considering the forms
and meanings associated with Neoclassicism, the course examines the
Gothic revival and subsequent 19thcentury movements (e.g., High Victorian Gothic, Second Empire,
Beaux-Arts classicism) as efforts to
find appropriate expressions for
diverse building forms. Studies
changes resulting from the Industrial
Revolution, including developments
in technology, and the reforms of Art
Nouveau and Secession architecture.
Works of Adam, Soane, Jefferson,
Schinkel, Pugin, Richardson, Sullivan, McKim, Mead and White,
Mackintosh, early Frank Lloyd
Wright, and others.
20th-Century Architecture
V43.0409 Prerequisite: V43.0002,
V43.0400, V43.0010, V43.0019,
V43.0021, V43.0408, V57.0016, or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Chronological account of 20th-century architecture and ideas. Considers such subjects as currents around
1910 on the eve of the First World
War, new technology, and the impact
of the war; architecture and politics
between the wars; the rise of expressionist design; the International Style
and the concurrent adaptation of traditional styles; Art Deco design;
midcentury glass curtain-wall architecture; “Brutalism”; and reactions to
modernism. Includes works by
Wright, Le Corbusier, Mies van der
Rohe, Louis Kahn, Alvar Aalto,
Philip Johnson, James Stirling, and
Frank Gehry, among others.
Arts of China
V43.0506 Identical to V33.0506.
Open to departmental majors, majors in
East Asian studies, and students who
have taken V43.0084, V43.0091, or
V43.0092. 4 points.
Explores the diversity of artistic
expression in China, including architecture and gardens, painting and
sculpture, and ceramics and textiles.
Concentrates on the function of artworks, their physical and sociological
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context, and the meanings they convey. To give the course a solid historical grounding, the time period covered is limited to around five hundred years (period covered varies
from semester to semester).
Asian Art in New York Museums
and Galleries
V43.0507 Identical to V33.0507.
Open to departmental majors, majors in
East Asian studies, and students who
have taken V43.0084, V43.0091, or
V43.0092. Also open to those who have
taken V43.0506 or V43.0509. Due to
space restrictions, enrollment is strictly
limited to 12 students. 4 points.
A hands-on fieldwork course that
meets at museum storerooms and
exhibitions, private collections, and
commercial galleries. The material
studied varies according to the museum exhibitions available at the time
the course is offered. Emphasizes
visual analysis and requires active
discussion of the works of art. Particularly suitable for students interested
in a museum or gallery career.
Buddhist Art
V43.0508 Identical to V33.0508.
4 points.
Surveys some of the major historical,
cultural, and artistic aspects of Buddhism as it developed in India,
Southeast Asia, Central Asia, China,
Korea, and Japan. Particular attention both to major monuments
selected from these regions and to
related works of art, such as sculpture, painting, and decorative arts.
Considered within the cultural
framework of each culture, these
monuments illustrate the changes
that occurred in these regions after
the adoption of Buddhism.
Arts of Japan
V43.0509 Identical to V33.0509. No
prerequisite, although primarily for fine
arts majors and majors in East Asian
studies. 4 points.
This course is intended to be an
introduction to the arts of Japan. The
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ARTS
lectures concentrate on a number of
buildings, sculptures, paintings, and
decorative objects in the development of Japanese art and society from
ca. 10,000 B.C. into the modern era.
Proceeds chronologically and investigates such themes as the relation
between past and present, artists and
patrons, imported and indigenous,
and “high and low.” The chronological focus of the course is subject to
change depending on the semester.
Proseminar: Developing Visual
Literacy (Art Criticism and
Analysis)
V43.0599 Prerequisite: varies according
to topic and instructor. 4 points.
Suggested for fine arts majors, this
course gives students who have
acquired an outline knowledge of
the history of art the opportunity to
practice techniques of analytic
description as tools for the comprehension of form, meaning, and
function in the visual arts. Close
inspection of individual works of art
through discussion, oral reports,
and written papers develops the student’s ability to translate the visual
into the verbal in a meaningful art
historical manner. The precise focus
of the course varies from semester to
semester.
Senior Seminar
V43.0600 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor or chair. Open to departmental majors who have completed five 4point fine arts courses. 4 points.
Exposure in small group discussion
format to historical/critical
problem(s) of particular present concern to the faculty member offering
the seminar. Requires oral report(s)
and/or a substantial paper.
Special Topics in the History of
Art
V43.0650 Prerequisites: vary according
to the material chosen for the course.
4 points.
Subjects change from semester to
semester.
Senior Thesis
V43.0700 Open to departmental majors
who have been accepted as candidates for
honors in fine arts in the first term of
their senior year and who have the permission of the departmental chair. See this
department’s subheading “Graduation
with Honors,” for eligibility requirements. It should be noted that students are
expected to work on their theses over a
period of two semesters. A grade point
average of 3.5 in fine arts courses is necessary. 4 points.
Independent Study
V43.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Independent study consists of the
investigation, under the guidance
and supervision of a designated
instructor, of a research topic agreed
on by the student and instructor and
approved by the chair. Requires a
substantial report written by the end
of the term.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Juniors and seniors who are credited
with a 3.0 average in five fine arts
courses may take, for undergraduate
credit, the 1000- and 2000-level
courses offered in the Graduate
School of Arts and Science at the
Institute of Fine Arts, 1 East 78th
Street. For more information, please
consult the Graduate School of Arts
and Science Bulletin or the announcement of courses of the Institute of
Fine Arts. Before registering for these
courses, students must obtain the
permission of a departmental adviser
as well as that of the instructor of the
course.
Foundations of Contemporary
Culture (55)
1 0 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, R O O M 9 0 3 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 8 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 1 1 9 .
E - M A I L : M A P. F C C @ N Y U . E D U . W W W. N Y U . E D U / C A S / M A P.
DIRECTOR OF THE MORSE
ACADEMIC PLAN:
Professor Myers
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR
OF THE MORSE ACADEMIC
PLAN FOR FOUNDATIONS
OF CONTEMPORARY
CULTURE:
Dr. Vincent Renzi
Program
T
he Foundations of Contemporary Culture (FCC) sequence of the Morse Academic
Plan seeks to provide students with the perspective and intellectual methods to
comprehend the development of our human cultures. The four FCC courses introduce students to the modes of inquiry by which societies may be studied, social issues
analyzed, and artistic activity explored. Together they give undergraduates a broad
methodological background on which to draw when later engaged in the more focused
work of their major courses of study. As a result, students receive a richer education than
any single major could provide.
Through this core experience in humanistic and social-scientific inquiry and its
focus on a number of similar readings across different course sections, the FCC framework
allows students to enter into a dialogue with one another despite differences in their course
schedules and in this way also encourages lifelong habits of intellectual curiosity and
engagement.
As they learn the sound employment of the academic approaches at the center of
their FCC classes, students develop their abilities to read critically, think rigorously, and
write effectively. By building these skills and an appreciation of the diversity of human experience, the FCC seeks to prepare students for their continued learning in and beyond college,
for active participation in their communities, and for lives in a rapidly changing world.
All FCC courses are taught by regular faculty, including some of the University’s
most distinguished professors. In addition to two lectures a week, every FCC course includes
recitation sections led by graduate student preceptors, allowing for small-group discussion
of the readings, close attention to students’ written work, and personal concern for students’
progress.
During their first year, students normally complete a class from Conversations of the West (V55.04xx) and
one from World Cultures
(V55.05xx), in either order. In the
sophomore year, students choose
classes from Societies and the Social
Sciences (V55.06xx) and from
Expressive Culture (V55.07xx),
again in either order.
Prerequisites. Students in the
International Writing Workshop
sequence should not start their
course work in the FCC until they
have completed International Writing Workshop I (V40.0004).
Students should complete the
first-year FCC classes and the expository writing requirement before
proceeding to the sophomore-level
classes.
Exemptions and Substitutions.
Because of the importance the faculty place on assuring every student a
core experience in the Foundations of
Contemporary Culture, there are no
FOUNDATIONS
OF
exemptions or substitutions for
Conversations of the West or World
Cultures.
Students who complete a designated major or minor program in the
social sciences are exempt from Societies and the Social Sciences. Those
who complete a designated major or
minor program in the humanities are
exempt from Expressive Culture.
Students who complete majors in
each area, who complete a joint
major designated in both areas, or
CONTEMPORARY
CULTURE
•
119
Courses
who complete a major in one area
and a minor in the other may satisfy
both components. A list of the area
designations of major and minor programs in the College may be found
in the MAP brochure, published
annually as a supplement to this bulletin, and on the MAP Web site.
CAS students can also satisfy
Societies and the Social Sciences and
Expressive Culture by completing
approved departmental courses. For a
current list of approved courses, consult the MAP Web site or the MAP
brochure.
In addition to the information listed
below, detailed descriptions of each
year’s course offerings may be found
in the MAP brochure, published
annually as a supplement to this bulletin, and on the MAP Web site.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and the 19th Century
V55.0404 4 points.
Continues with Marx’s Communist
Manifesto, selections from Darwin,
Nietzsche’s Genealogy of Morality, or
Freud’s Civilization and Its Discontents,
and with other readings from the
19th and early 20th centuries.
World Cultures: Africa
V55.0505 4 points.
Key concepts related to understanding sub-Saharan African cultures and
societies, concentrating in particular
on teaching students how to think
critically and consult sources sensibly
when studying non-Western cultures. Topics include problems in the
interpretation of African literature,
African history, gender issues, the
question of whether African thought
and values constitute a unique system of thinking, the impact of the
slave trade and colonialism upon
African societies and culture, and the
difficulties of and means for translating and interpreting the system of
thought and behavior in an African
traditional society into terms meaningful to Westerners. Among the
readings are novels, current philosophical theory, and feminist interpretations of black and white
accounts of African societies and the
place of women in them. Issues are
approached with the use of analyses
from history, anthropology, sociology,
literary theory, and philosophy.
CONVERSATIONS OF THE
WEST
Conversations of the West sections
all share a recommended reading list
of works from Greek, Roman, and
Near Eastern antiquity. Typically, the
classes have the following readings in
common: the books of Genesis and
Exodus from the Hebrew Scriptures,
the Gospel According to Luke and
Acts of the Apostles from the Christian New Testament, a Platonic dialogue and a Sophoclean or Euripidean tragedy, Virgil’s Aeneid, and
Augustine’s Confessions. Additional
readings for each class are selected by
the individual instructors, who take
their guidance from the recommended reading lists for the several tracks.
In addition to the traditional lecture/recitation format, selected sections of Conversations of the West
are also offered in writing-intensive
versions in conjunction with
V40.0100, Writing the Essay. Consult the Directory of Classes for each
semester’s schedule.
WORLD CULTURES
World Cultures: The Ancient
Near East and Egypt
V55.0501 4 points.
Egypt and Mesopotamia, the two
great non-Western civilizations of
the Ancient Near East, examined
through ancient texts illustrating
their historical development and culture. These are the civilizations
where writing began; and each had a
significant impact on Israel, Greece,
Rome, and, eventually, the West.
Egypt and Mesopotamia are compared and contrasted for developments such as urbanism and state
formation, imperialism, religion,
warfare, family life, trade and economy, kingship, the roles of men and
women, literature, cosmology, and
art. Students explore literature in the
broadest sense, including documents
that might otherwise simply be
classed as historical.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and the Middle Ages
V55.0401 4 points.
Continues with Dante’s Inferno, selections from Paradiso, and with other
readings from the Middle Ages.
World Cultures: Islamic Societies
V55.0502 4 points.
Examines the common base and
regional variations of Islamic societies. An “Islamic society” is here
understood as one that shares, either
as operative present or as historical
past, that common religious base
called Islam. For Muslims, Islam is
not simply a set of beliefs or observances but also includes a history; its
study is thus by nature historical,
topical, and regional. The emphasis
in the premodern period is first on
the Quran and then on law, political
theory, theology, and mysticism. For
the more recent period, the stress is
on the search for religious identity.
Throughout, students are exposed to
Islamic societies in the words of their
own writings.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and the Renaissance
V55.0402 4 points.
Continues with Machiavelli’s Prince, a
Shakespearean play or Milton’s Samson Agonistes, and with other readings
from the Renaissance.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and the Enlightenment
V55.0403 4 points.
Continues with Pascal’s Pensées,
Rousseau’s Confessions, and with other
readings from the Enlightenment.
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FOUNDATIONS
OF
CONTEMPORARY
World Cultures: The Chinese and
Japanese Traditions
V55.0506 4 points.
Essential aspects of Asian culture—
Confucianism, Taoism, Buddhism,
and Shintoism—studied through
careful reading of major works of
philosophy and literature. A roughly
equal division between Chinese and
Japanese works is meant to give a
basic understanding of the broad
similarities and the less obvious, but
all-important, differences among the
cultures of Confucian Asia. One reading is a Vietnamese adaptation of a
Chinese legend. The last two readings, modern novellas from Japan
and China, show the reaction of the
traditional cultures to the Western
invasions.
World Cultures: Japan—A
Cultural History
V55.0507 4 points.
A consideration of the prehistory to
Japan’s modernist transformation
through an analysis of key literary,
CULTURE
religious, and artistic texts. Concentrates on the historical experiences
that produced elements of a national
culture before there was a nation and
on the consciousness of being Japanese before there was a “Japan.” Examines how key cultural elements were
used to make a modern nation-state.
World Cultures: Russia Between
East and West
V55.0510 4 points.
Distinctive historical and geographical dichotomies and issues in Russian
culture. Emphasis is on primary documents, including literary works,
travel notes, works of art, and political statements from all periods, chosen to establish the particular matrix
of competing positions that make up
the Russian national and cultural
identity.
World Cultures: Middle Eastern
Societies
V55.0511 4 points.
The popular American picture of the
Middle East as a place of violence,
veiled women, and oil wealth portrays none of the richness or complexity of most people’s lives in the
region. How can we make sense of
these seemingly unfamiliar societies
and think critically about Western
images of the unfamiliar? Questions
examined in depth include the following: What variety of sources do
people in the Middle East draw on to
define their sense of who they are—
as members of particular households,
regions, nations, or religious communities? How do women and men construct their gender identity? In what
ways are village, town, and city lives
being transformed? Do people of the
Middle East experience their region’s
politics the way it is portrayed in the
West? What are some of the causes
of political repression, armed struggle, or terror? How did European
colonialism reshape the lives of people in the region, and how do they
today encounter the cultural and economic power of the United States
and Europe? Readings are drawn
from history, anthropology, political
economy, and the contemporary literature of the region.
World Cultures: China
V55.0512 4 points.
Fundamental concepts and practices
of Chinese society and culture, examined using primary sources in translation whenever possible. By studying the social, political, religious,
ideological, ritual, economic, and
cultural life of the Chinese, students
gain a sense of the core values and
issues of Chinese civilization and
how these have affected and continue
to have an impact on the way people
think and live.
World Cultures: Pre-Columbian
America
V55.0513 4 points.
The beliefs and practices of two
major societies and cultures of preHispanic Mexico: the Aztecs and the
Mayas. We examine the nature of
cultures based primarily on an oral
tradition; how these cultures saw
their origins and history; how they
defined their relationship to community, to nature, to the gods, and to
the state; their ways of seeing life and
death; and their concept of time and
reality. Themes include politics and
governance, religion and ritual, history and myth, narrative and poetry,
codices and stelae, urban centers and
ceremonial spaces. Students come to
understand non-Western ways of
thought and practice and to see the
continuity of these traditions into
present-day indigenous culture. Also
considered is the issue of the authenticity of sources translated from their
original languages and transcribed in
the post-conquest period.
World Cultures: Ancient Israel
V55.0514 4 points.
The culture of the ancient Israelite
societies of biblical times, covering
the period from about 1200 B.C.E. to
the conquests of Alexander the
Great, in the fourth century B.C.E.
Topics include the achievements of
these societies in the areas of law and
social organization, prophetic movements, Israelite religion, and ancient
Hebrew literature. The Hebrew
Bible preserves much of the creativity of the ancient Israelites, but
archaeological excavations in Israel
and neighboring lands, as well as the
discovery of ancient writings in
Hebrew and related languages, have
added greatly to our knowledge of
life as it was lived in biblical times.
The civilizations of Egypt and SyriaMesopotamia also shed light on
Israelite culture. Of particular interest is the early development of
Israelite monotheism, which, in
time, emerged as ancient Judaism,
the mother religion of Christianity
and Islam.
FOUNDATIONS
OF
World Cultures: Latin America
V55.0515 4 points.
Explores the cultural, social, and
political organization of indigenous
people before the period of European
colonization. Studies the dynamics of
the colonial encounter, focusing on
such themes as indigenous responses
to European rule, the formation of
“Indian” society, and the interaction
of Europeans, Africans, and indigenous people. Considers postcolonial
Latin America, focusing on themes
such as political culture, competing
ideologies of economics and social
development, and the construction of
collective identities based on region,
race, ethnicity, gender, and class.
Readings consist mostly of primary
sources and allow students to hear
diverse voices within Latin American
society. Works by European conquerors, Inca and Aztec descendants
in the colonial period, and African
and creole slaves are studied. Course
materials also include novels, short
stories, films, photographs, and
music.
World Cultures: India
V55.0516 4 points.
Considers the paradoxes of modern
India: ancient religious ideas coexisting with material progress, hierarchical caste society with parliamentary
democracy, and urban shantytowns
with palatial high-rises. Integrates
research on India’s cultural values
with social-scientific perspectives on
their contemporary relevance.
Examines problems such as protective discrimination for lower castes
and cultural nationalism and shows
how democracy involves difficult
choices among competing, often
opposed, ancient and modern
cultural values.
World Cultures: Native Peoples
of North America
V55.0519 4 points.
Since well before contact with Europeans, native peoples living in the
United States and Canada have
spoken many different languages,
practiced many varied lifeways, and
organized their societies distinctively.
To convey a sense of the range and
diversity of contemporary Native
American life and to understand the
impact of colonial and postcolonial
histories on current affairs, concepts
and images developed in a variety of
academic disciplines as well as in
popular culture are discussed and
examined critically. Anthropological,
CONTEMPORARY
CULTURE
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121
linguistic, sociological, historical,
and literary works and studies of
societies in three geographic areas
(the Northwest, the Southwest, and
the Northeast) are used to explore
particular problems confronting analysts and native peoples alike. Topics
include how we understand social
and cultural diversity and complexity, differing systems of value and
social inequality, language use, uses
of documentary and oral histories,
the impact of urban and rural lifeways, museums, federal acknowledgment or recognition of tribal status,
and repatriation (the return of bones
and objects of cultural importance to
native peoples).
World Cultures: Muslim Europe
V55.0520 4 points.
From the early eighth century C.E.
onward, Islamic civilization, which
embraced both sides of the Mediterranean, made far-reaching and critical contributions to the course of
Western development. The past and
present of Muslims within the
boundaries of present-day Europe are
examined beginning with the foundation of the oldest Islamic societies
of the West, with particular emphasis on the art and science of AlAndalus (medieval Spain) and on the
early modern government and social
structure of the Ottoman Balkans.
Through history, literature, and the
visual arts, we then consider the
diversity of the modern Muslim
experience in Europe, from Russia to
England, and address the dilemmas
of self-definition and survival that
confront citizen and immigrant alike
as minorities within predominantly
Christian nation-states.
•
FOUNDATIONS
role of historical traditions, leadership, ideology, ramifying events, and
socioeconomic factors.
World Cultures: New Guinea
V55.0524 4 points.
How has the outside world imagined,
toured, colonized, and portrayed the
island of New Guinea? Conversely,
how have New Guineans responded
to these events and interactions, both
by internalizing and contesting
external depictions and domination?
We study the contrasting ways outsiders and New Guineans have narrated these overlapping experiences
and histories. The topic is approached
through specific dramas, events, and
processes (for example, first contact
and colonialism, missionization, the
Second World War, and independence). Course materials include
different media and modes of representation. Students view historical
and contemporary films by and about
New Guineans, listen to recordings
and radio programs, and read writings by indigenous and non-New
Guinean authors.
World Cultures: Contemporary
Latino Cultures
V55.0529 4 points.
Examines the growth and development of “Latino” as a distinct category of identity out of the highly
diverse populations of Latin American background in the United States,
paying particular attention to the
social processes shaping its emergence. Provides a detailed examination of the processes of cultural creation behind the rising growth of
transnational cultures and identities
worldwide, and of the forces that are
fueling their development. Begins by
exploring the immigration of Latin
American peoples to U.S. cities, then
turns to three case studies of emerging Latino communities, and ends by
examining contemporary issues
involving Latinos in urban centers
such as New York.
World Cultures: Muslim Spain
V55.0527 4 points.
Considers one example of the longterm establishment of a Muslim polity in Europe. Traces the political
flow of events from the Arab-Berber
conquest of the peninsula and their
experiments in state-formation to the
emergence of Christian rivals in the
northern kingdoms and the reversal
of the tide until the final submission
of the surviving Muslim enclave of
Granada in 1492. Of chief concern is
the construction of a remarkable
social and intellectual culture out of
the various indigenous and imported
elements; how the three indigestible
ingredients called Islam, Christianity,
and Judaism fared in that melting
pot the Spaniards called convivencia,
particularly when one of the others
was stirring; and the problems posed
by the notion of “Muslim Spain” for
Spanish historians and for Westerners
generally.
World Cultures: Islam in Asia
V55.0523 4 points.
Two-thirds of the world’s Muslims
today live in Central, South, and
Southeast Asia. How did Islamic traditions spread from the Middle East?
What has been the nature of the
ensuing dialogue between Muslims
and adherents of existing traditions
(Hinduism, Buddhism, Confucianism, Christianity, shamanism)? Topics include the nature of dialogue
and conflict between the adherents of
Islam and those of other religious
traditions, the economic and social
issues behind conflicts waged in the
name of religion, the different and
constantly evolving “Islams” that
122
thrive in Asia, and the politics of
Islam today, from Afghanistan eastward to the Philippines.
World Cultures: Russia Since 1917
V55.0528 4 points.
Major periods, developments, and
interpretative issues in Russian politics, history, and society, from the
1917 revolution to the present.
Emphasis is on the Soviet experience,
though the czarist past and postSoviet developments are also considered. Special attention is given to the
OF
CONTEMPORARY
SOCIETIES AND THE SOCIAL
SCIENCES
Note that the prerequisite for all
Societies and the Social Sciences
courses is completion of V55.04xx
and V55.05xx and completion of or
exemption from V40.0100 or
V40.0009.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Topics in Interdisciplinary
Perspective
V55.0600 4 points.
Examines social phenomena that
cross the boundaries among the
various social-scientific disciplines.
Topics vary each term and may
include, for example, human migration, religion, fascism, or colonialism.
By considering the methodologies
appropriate to the study of these topics, students learn to appreciate the
characteristic approaches of the social
sciences, their power to help us
understand such phenomena, and
their limitations.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on
Gender and Power
V55.0607 4 points.
How does gender structure our social
worlds? How do gender systems, as
systems of power, shape the lives of
women and men cross-culturally?
How do different social theories and
analytical frameworks allow us to
CULTURE
think more clearly about these questions? The course analyzes gender
systems in diverse societies (Africa;
South, East, and Southeast Asia;
Eastern and Western Europe; and the
Middle East) and considers the
effects that historical and contemporary interconnections among societies
have had on gender systems and
women’s lives. Topics include theories of women’s status; forms of
analysis; comparative revolution
(China, France, Iran); rights, needs,
and citizenship; the politics of reproduction; women’s work in the global
economy.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on
Capitalism
V55.0615 4 points.
What is capitalism? By the end of
the 20th century it seemed to have
conquered the world. Countries
everywhere are turning to the idea of
the free market and are being pulled
or pushed in the global economy of
capitalism. Despite capitalism’s success, social scientists have never
agreed about what it is or how it
works. We examine some of the different ways in which social scientists
over the last two hundred years have
tried to tell the story of how capitalism works and also explores some the
different kinds of capitalism that
exist today and the different ways in
which social scientists understand
them.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on
the Language of America’s Ethnic
Minorities
V55.0616 4 points.
Examines the role of language in
communities in the United States,
specifically within African American,
Asian American, Latino, and Native
American populations. Explores the
relationship of language to culture,
race, and ethnicity. In particular,
looks for similarities and differences
across these communities and considers the role that language experiences
play in current models of race and
ethnicity.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on
Metropolitan Studies
V55.0631 4 points.
Considers the major approaches that
have been deployed to investigate
the urban experience in the modern
world and explores the historical
geography of capitalist urbanization
with particular attention to North
American and Western European
cities, to colonial and postcolonial
cities, and to the global contexts of
urban development. Major topics
include urban and regional planning,
urban politics and governance,
suburbanization and regional development, gentrification and urban
social movements, the gendering and
radicalization of urban space, racial
segregation, and urban design and
architecture.
Society and the Social Sciences:
Anthropological Perspectives
V55.0640 4 points.
Anthropology concerns the ways in
which people live in society, especially as mediated through cultural
processes. Deeply concerned with
non-Western as well as Western ways
of life and the relations between
them, anthropology addresses the
problem of differences and similarities within and between human populations, including the use of differences to establish or resist power
within social formations. Anthropology views such differences not simply as situations of the past but as
constantly being produced in new
global formations of power and commerce. Students explore how anthropologists use data to develop basic
premises about the nature of human
societies and the foundations of distinctive regimes of sociality, and they
examine theories of social life in the
terms of a commitment to grasping
the perspectives, knowledge, and
lived experience of social actors
through the methodology of ethnographic fieldwork.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Economic Perspectives
V55.0650 4 points.
Economics explores the ways that
individuals in society assign value,
act to optimize the gain of what they
consider valuable, and seek to limit
the risk of losing those valuables. To
understand how people make these
decisions, economists model the ways
that individuals take account of
uncertain circumstances, the limits
of their own knowledge, and the
inefficiency of social institutions in
which they participate. Topics of this
course may include decision theory,
markets, and the historical development of economic analysis. With this
perspective, students go on to consider social issues such as voting
FOUNDATIONS
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behavior or fiscal and trade policy.
Consideration is also given to critiques of economics methods and to
discussion of other social-scientific
approaches.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Linguistic Perspectives
V55.0660 4 points.
Examines language from a dual perspective: as part of mankind’s biological endowment and as a social phenomenon. Considers the structure,
universality, and diversity of human
language. Introduces the core areas of
grammar: its sound system, the
structures of words and sentences,
and meanings. Examines the representation of language in the brain,
first language acquisition, and processing. Introduces linguistic universals, dialect, sociolects, and the
mechanism of linguistic change.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Political Perspectives
V55.0670 4 points.
The study of politics uses social science methods to understand the
institutions that societies construct
to address their problems and needs.
Topics of this course may include
interstate war, ethnic conflict, environmental degradation, democratic
transition, poverty, globalization, or
government gridlock. Students analyze the institutional strategies that
have been devised to deal with these
issues and examine related theoretical concerns with concrete implications for reform. For instance: What
is the best way to foster international
cooperation in an area where little or
none exists? How can formerly nondemocratic states successfully make a
transition to democracy? How
important is an independent judiciary, and how can it be established?
What, if anything, can be done to
ensure genuine competition between
political parties, and on what does it
depend? Also considered are important questions of social science
method such as the role of theoretical
models in explanation, the status of
inferences made from small samples,
and the widespread problem of selection bias in nonexperimental data.
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Psychological Perspectives
V55.0680 4 points.
Why do people do what they do,
think what they think, feel what
they feel? Psychology is the scientific
study of the mind and of the indi-
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123
vidual’s behavior. It assumes that
mental and behavioral events—normal and abnormal—have biological,
psychological, and social or cultural
causes. Studying these causes, how
they operate, and what their consequences are yields greater understanding of oneself, other people, and
our society; it may also have implications for social policy and for how we
lead our lives. Analyzing data from
observations, surveys, and experiments, students consider the current
state of psychological knowledge,
how it is obtained, and its limitations.
reader’s ideas or opinions, an expression of the identity of the writer, or
none of these?
Societies and the Social Sciences:
Sociological Perspectives
V55.0690 4 points.
How can we understand the uniquely
social or collective aspects of human
lives? Sociology begins with the
recognition that the lives of individuals are profoundly shaped by social
groups and institutions. It maintains
that these groups and institutions
have a reality of their own, which
cannot be understood simply as the
product of individual actions, beliefs,
and desires; and that they shape individuals as much as, or even more
than, individuals shape society. Students consider the relationship
between individuals, groups, and
institutions in particular contexts,
examining topics such as social
protest, law and criminality, social
policy, the economic organization of
society, the arts, and contemporary
conflicts over religion, race, class,
and gender. They explore how various social-scientific theories and
methods illuminate such issues and
how these insights may help us to
address important social problems.
EXPRESSIVE CULTURE
Note that the prerequisite for all
Expressive Culture courses is completion of V55.04xx and V55.05xx and
completion of or exemption from
V40.0100 or V40.0009.
Expressive Culture: Words
V55.0710 4 points.
What is literature or the literary? Is
there a literary language that works
differently from ordinary language?
What is literary style and form?
What is the position of the writer or
artist in relation to society, and what
is the function of the reader? Is literature a mirror of the world that it
describes, an attempt to influence a
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FOUNDATIONS
Expressive Culture: Images
V55.0720 4 points.
What is the place of art in an imagesaturated world? We begin by considering the power and taboo of
images and the ways in which individuals and institutions that constitute “the art world” classify some of
these images as works of art; turn to
explore the visual and conceptual
challenges presented by major works
of sculpture, architecture, and painting; and conclude with a selection of
problems raised by art today. Students develop the vocabulary to both
appreciate and question the artistic
“gestures” of society in various places
and times.
Expressive Culture: Images—
Painting and Sculpture in New
York Field Study
V55.0721 4 points.
New York’s public art collections
contain important examples of painting and sculpture from almost every
phase of the past, as well as some of
the world’s foremost works of contemporary art. Meeting once a week
for an extended period, the course
combines on-campus lectures with
group excursions to the museums or
other locations where these works are
exhibited.
Expressive Culture: Images—
Architecture in New York Field
Study
V55.0722 4 points.
New York’s rich architectural heritage offers a unique opportunity for
firsthand consideration of the concepts and styles of modern urban
architecture, as well as its social,
financial, and cultural contexts.
Meeting once a week for an extended
period, the course combines on-campus lectures with group excursions to
prominent buildings. Consideration
is given both to individual buildings
as examples of 19th- and 20th-century architecture, as well as to phenomena such as the development of the
skyscraper and the adaptation of
older buildings to new uses.
Expressive Culture: Sounds
V55.0730 4 points.
Our lives pulsate with patterns of
sounds that we call music. We
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CONTEMPORARY
encounter these sounds in our homes,
cars, stores, and exercise salons; they
accompany us to the grocery store,
the dentist’s office, and the movies.
Yet we rarely think consciously about
what they mean. Through a series of
specific case studies we investigate
the function and significance of music
and the musician in human life. We
raise basic questions about how music
has been created, produced, perceived, and evaluated at diverse historical moments, in a variety of geographical locations, and among different cultural groups. Through aural
explorations and discussion of how
these vivid worlds “sound” in time
and space, we assess the value of
music in human experience.
Expressive Culture: Performance
V55.0740 4 points.
Examines “performance” both as a
practice and as a theoretical tool with
which to understand today’s world.
The broad spectrum of live performance is explored by means of lectures, discussions, and field trips.
Students look at theatre and dance,
performance in everyday life, rituals,
popular entertainments, and intercultural performance. On the theoretical
level, students are introduced to
“speech acts,” “restored behavior,”
“ritual process,” and “play.” Students
see a broad variety of performances,
such as Native American powwow,
Indian Hindu ritual drama, offBroadway theatre and dance,
African-American gospel, street performers, and courtroom trials.
Expressive Culture: Film
V55.0750 4 points.
Film is a medium that combines a
number of arts. It lies at the intersection of art and technology and of art
and mass culture, and at the boundaries of the national and the global.
Film is also a medium that coincides
with and contributes to the invention of modern life. By exploring the
expressive and representational
achievements of cinema in the context of modernity and mass culture,
students learn the concepts to grasp
the different ways in which films create meaning, achieve their emotional
impact, and respond in complex
ways to the historical contexts in
which they are made.
CULTURE
Foundations of Scientific
Inquiry (55)
1 0 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 7 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 1 1 9 .
E - M A I L : M O R S E . P L A N @ N Y U . E D U . W W W. N Y U . E D U / C A S / M A P.
DIRECTOR OF THE MORSE
ACADEMIC PLAN:
Professor Myers
ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF
THE MORSE ACADEMIC
PLAN FOR FOUNDATIONS
OF SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY:
Dr. Trace Jordan
ACADEMIC COORDINATOR
FOR FOUNDATIONS OF
SCIENTIFIC INQUIRY:
Dr. Andre Adler
Program
S
cience and technology play such a central role in the modern world that even individuals not directly engaged in scientific or technical pursuits need to have solid skills in
quantitative and analytical reasoning and a clear understanding of scientific investigation. Even more than their forebears, citizens of the 21st century will need competence and
confidence in dealing with the approaches and findings of science if they are to make
informed decisions on vital political, economic, and social issues.
Rather than striving for encyclopedic coverage of facts, Foundations of Scientific
Inquiry (FSI) courses stress the process of scientific reasoning and seek to illustrate the role of
science and mathematics in our understanding of the natural world. The objectives of the FSI
sequence are to give students who will not be science majors a positive experience in scientific inquiry and to encourage learning about how science is done. The quantitative component of these courses emphasizes the critical role of mathematics in the analysis of natural
phenomena. The courses within the FSI are collected into three groups—Quantitative Reasoning, Natural Science I, and Natural Science II. All lectures are taught by regular faculty,
including some of the University’s most distinguished professors, and each course includes
workshops or related laboratory sections led by graduate student preceptors.
In the FSI sequence, students choose
one course in Quantitative Reasoning (V55.01XX), followed by one in
the physical sciences from the Natural Science I grouping (V55.02XX),
and then one in the biological sciences from the Natural Science II
grouping (V55.03XX).
Exemptions and Substitutions.
Students who major in a natural science, who complete the prehealth
program, or who complete the combined B.S./B.S.E. program are
exempt from the FSI requirements.
In addition, Quantitative Reasoning,
Natural Science I, and Natural Science II can each be satisfied by
appropriate Advanced Placement
(AP) credit or by substituting specific courses as listed below.
For Advanced Placement Examination equivalencies, consult the
chart in the Admissions section of
this bulletin.
QUANTITATIVE REASONING
Students will take a screening/
exemption examination to determine
their appropriate placement in a
Quantitative Reasoning course or
exemption from the Quantitative
Reasoning requirement. The screening examination is offered in the
summer and periodically during each
semester. The requirement can also
be satisfied by the following options:
1. AP credit in calculus (Mathematics AB or BC).
2. AP credit in statistics.
3. Completion of one of the following: Calculus I (V63.0121);
Intensive Calculus I (V63.0221);
Algebra and Calculus with Applications to Business and Economics
(V63.0017); or Statistical Reasoning
for the Behavioral Sciences
(V89.0009)
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OF
NATURAL SCIENCE I AND II
(V55.02XX AND V55.03XX)
1. AP credit for Biology (8
points), Chemistry (8 points),
Physics B (10 points), or Physics CMech (3 points) and Physics C-E&M
(3 points).
2. Completion of one of the following: Principles of Biology I and
II (V23.0011-0012); College Chemistry I and II (V25.0101-0102) and
lab (V25.0103-0104); Honors College Chemistry I and II (V25.01090110) and lab (V25.0111-0112);
General Physics I and II (V85.00110012); and Physics I and II and lab
(V85.0091-0094).
NATURAL SCIENCE I
(V55.02XX)
1. AP credit for Physics C-Mech
(3 points) or Physics C-E&M (3
points).
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INQUIRY
•
125
Courses
2. Completion of one of the following sequences: College Chemistry
I (V25.0101) and lab (V25.0103);
Honors College Chemistry I
(V25.0109) and lab (V25.0111);
General Physics I (V85.0011); and
Physics I (V85.0091) and lab
(V85.0092).
NATURAL SCIENCE II
(V55.03XX)
In addition to the information listed
below, detailed descriptions of each
year’s course offerings may be found in
the MAP brochure, published annually as a supplement to this bulletin.
unit of the computer, is considered in
theory and is the subject of a laboratory exploration. Students design and
construct circuits that perform arithmetical operations, such as addition,
as well as more complex circuits,
such as the encoder, decoder, multiplexer and arithmetic logic unit, that
are critical to the functioning of the
computer.
1. Completion of Principles of
Biology I (V23.0011).
2. Completion of Human Evolution
(V14.0002).
QUANTITATIVE REASONING
Quantitative Reasoning: Mathematical Patterns in Nature
V55.0101 4 points.
Examines the role of mathematics as
the language of science through case
studies selected from the natural sciences and economics. Topics include
the scale of things in the natural
world; the art of making estimates;
cross-cultural views of knowledge
about the natural world; growth
laws, including the growth of money
and the concept of “constant dollars”;
radioactivity and its role in unraveling the history of the earth and solar
system; the notion of randomness
and basic ideas from statistics; scaling laws—why are things the size
they are?; the cosmic distance ladder;
the meaning of “infinity.” This calculator-based course is designed to help
you use mathematics with some confidence in applications.
Quantitative Reasoning: Mathematical Patterns in Society
V55.0103 4 points.
Examines the role of mathematics in
a variety of contexts in the natural
and social sciences, but with special
emphasis on problems in economics.
The course develops tools that span
both the natural and the social sciences, including sampling, growth
and decay, present value, and probability and statistics. These topics are
used as a foundation to explore the
application of mathematical
approaches to economics, especially
the use of game theory and its related
techniques.
Quantitative Reasoning: Elementary Statistics
V55.0105 4 points.
The purpose of the course is to understand and use statistical methods.
Mathematical theory is minimized.
Actual survey and experimental data
are analyzed. Computations are done
with desk or pocket calculators. Topics: description of data, elementary
probability, random sampling, mean,
variance, standard deviation, statistical tests, and estimation.
Quantitative Reasoning: Mathematics and the Computer
V55.0102 4 points.
The mathematics and physics that
make the digital world a reality are
the subject of this class. Students
investigate the mathematical ideas
behind how computers operate and
construct decision-making machines
that obey the principles of mathematical logic. The course includes a
basic introduction to electricity and
circuits, allowing students to make
physical realizations of abstract
mathematical ideas, such as number
bases, in order to see their importance to the design of computational
machines. The transistor, the basic
element of the central processing
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FOUNDATIONS
Quantitative Reasoning:
Computers, Number Theory, and
Cryptography
V55.0106 4 points.
An introduction to the theory of
numbers—prime numbers, factorization, congruences, Diophantine equations—and its applications to cryp-
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SCIENTIFIC
INQUIRY
tography. Lab sessions involve work
with the computer and some emphasis on discovery and group work.
NATURAL SCIENCE I
Note that the prerequisite for all
Natural Science I courses is completion of or exemption from
V55.01XX.
Natural Science I: The Cosmos
and the Earth
V55.0202 4 points.
Focuses on the modern scientific
findings relating to major questions
about the universe and our place in
it. What is the origin of the universe? How did the elements form?
Where do stars and planets come
from? How did life on Earth originate? How did intelligence develop
and human beings come to exist?
And, are we alone in the cosmos?
Evidence for the big bang theory of
the creation of the universe and the
formation of elements during stellar
evolution is presented, along with
how that evidence is extracted from
the analysis of light coming from the
stars. The constituents of the universe, from the large-scale realm of
the galaxies to exotic objects such as
neutron stars and black holes, are
discussed. The course then focuses on
the earth and other earthlike planets;
outlines the evolution of life and
intelligence in the context of the
sometimes catastrophic geologic history of our planet; and ends with a
discussion of the possibilities for
intelligent life in the cosmos. Laboratory projects include studies of the
nature of light and the observed
spectra of starlight; the evidence for
an expanding universe; experimental
studies of impact cratering on planetary surfaces and the current impact
hazard; the geologic evidence for
continental drift; and the catastrophic
causes of mass extinctions of life.
Natural Science I: Energy and the
Environment
V55.0203 4 points.
Uses the principles of chemistry to
analyze the environmental implications of energy usage and policy
decisions concerning energy and the
environment. Topics include the
atmosphere, ozone and its depletion,
greenhouse gases, and acid rain. Case
studies from the New York City
environment, such as the Hudson
River, are used to focus discussions.
Finally, the basis of our need for
energy, fossil fuels and their supplies,
and the available alternatives are discussed.
Natural Science I: Einstein’s
Universe
V55.0204 4 points.
Addresses the science and life of Einstein in the context of 20th-century
physics, beginning with 19th-century ideas about light, space, and time
in order to understand why Einstein’s work was so innovative. Einstein’s most influential ideas are contained in his theories of special relativity, which reformulated conceptions of space and time, and general
relativity, which extended these ideas
to gravitation. Both these theories
are quantitatively explored, together
with wide-ranging applications of
these ideas, from the nuclear energy
that powers the sun to black holes
and the big bang theory of the birth
of the universe.
Natural Science I: Exploration of
Light and Color
V55.0205 4 points.
Color science is an interdisciplinary
endeavor that incorporates both the
physics and perception of light and
color. This course is an introduction
to color and the related topics of
light and optics, including their
applications to photography, art, natural phenomena, and technology. Science has provided a rich understanding of visual effects that has dramatically enriched our appreciation of
what we see. Topics include how
color is described and measured (colorimetry); how light is produced;
how atoms and molecules affect
light; how the human retina detects
light; and how lenses are used in
cameras, telescopes, and microscopes.
Our investigation necessarily touches
on aspects such as the anatomy of the
eye and aspects of human vision that
influence how we see color. Laboratory
projects include additive and
subtractive color mixing, pinhole
photography, cow eye dissection, colorimetric measurements, and color
classification schemes.
Natural Science I: From Plato to
Pluto—Scientists View the Solar
System
V55.0206 4 points.
The first half deals with the basic
phenomena of astronomy: the earth
and sky, the motions of stars, sun,
moon, and planets. It then considers
the historical development of astronomy from antiquity to the 17th century. The last quarter is devoted to
the space-age exploration of the solar
system. Laboratory exercises help
familiarize students with basic astronomical concepts.
Natural Science I: Systems of the
Human Body
V55.0207 4 points.
Aims to develop the sciences necessary for understanding the various
interrelated systems operating within
the human body. The skeletal-muscle
system converts muscle contraction
into human motion (the science of
biomechanics is relevant here). The
cardiovascular system transports
blood throughout the body, carrying
oxygen to the site of muscle contractions and removing carbon dioxide
and heat (fluid dynamics). The consumed oxygen is converted into work
and heat, and the rate of consumption varies with speed in walking,
running, etc. (thermodynamics). The
nervous system transports electrical
signals from the sensory perceptors
to the brain and from there to the
muscles; these signals determine
human reaction time, coordination,
and optimal strategies for human
performance (electrodynamics and
optimal control theory). All of these
systems, working together, make
possible human motion and thought.
NATURAL SCIENCE II
Note that the prerequisite for all
Natural Science II courses is completion of or exemption from
V55.01XX and V55.02XX.
Natural Science II: Human
Genetics
V55.0303 4 points.
We are currently witnessing a revolution in human genetics, where the
FOUNDATIONS
OF
ability to scrutinize and manipulate
DNA has allowed scientists to gain
unprecedented insights into the role
of heredity. This course explores the
foundations and frontiers of modern
human genetics, with an emphasis
on understanding and critically evaluating new discoveries in this rapidly evolving field of research. The syllabus begins with an overview of the
principles of inheritance, where simple Mendelian genetics is contrasted
with the interactions of genes and
environment that influence complex
physical or behavioral traits. In this
context, we develop the statistical
techniques used to quantify genetic
inheritance or establish a linkage
between genes and characteristics.
Descending to the molecular level,
the course investigates how genetic
information is encoded in DNA and
examines the science and social
impact of genetic technology, including topics such as cloning, genetic
testing, and the human genome project. The course concludes by studying how genes vary in populations
and how geneticists are contributing
to our understanding of human evolution and diversity. The laboratory
projects throughout the semester
introduce students to the methodology of genetic research, ranging from
diagnosing inherited traits in families to hands-on explorations of the
techniques of genetic engineering.
Natural Science II: Human
Origins
V55.0305 4 points.
The study of “human origins” is an
interdisciplinary endeavor that
involves a synthesis of research from
a number of different areas of science. The aim of this course is to
introduce students to the various
approaches and methods used by scientists to investigate the origins and
evolutionary history of our own
species. Topics include reconstructing evolutionary relationships using
molecular and morphological data;
the mitochondrial Eve hypothesis;
ancient DNA; human variation and
natural selection; the use of stable
isotopes to reconstruct dietary behavior in prehistoric humans; solving a
2,000-year-old murder mystery; the
importance of studies of chimpanzees
for understanding human behavior;
and the four-million-year-old fossil
evidence for human evolution.
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INQUIRY
•
127
Natural Science II: Brain and
Behavior
V55.0306 4 points.
This course covers current and
important topics in neuroscience.
Why do so many people drink alcohol and take drugs? What does
Prozac do to the brain? Is the brain
closer to a computer or a plant? Students gain an understanding of the
role of the brain and the nervous system in such areas as learning, perception, drug addiction, depression,
stress, and Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases. Laboratory topics
explore brain anatomy, basic neural
processes, sensory systems, receptor
function, and behavior through
hands-on experiments and computer
demonstrations. Handling of animals
and animal brain tissue is required in
some labs.
function of such biomolecules is their
three-dimensional structure that
endows them with a specific function. This information provides the
scientific basis for understanding
drug action and how new drugs are
designed. The course begins with the
principles of chemical binding, molecular structure, and acid-base properties that govern the structure and
function of biomolecules. It then
applies these principles to study the
varieties of protein architecture and
how enzymes facilitate biochemical
reactions. It concludes with an
overview of molecular genetics and
how recent information from
the Human Genome Project is stimulating new approaches in diagnosing disease and designing drug
treatments.
Natural Science II: Lessons from
the Biosphere
V55.0311 4 points.
Provides a foundation of knowledge
about how Earth’s biosphere works.
This includes the biggest ideas and
findings about biology on the global
scale—the scale in which we live.
Such knowledge is especially crucial
today because we humans are perturbing so many systems within the
biosphere. The course has four main
Natural Science II: The
Molecules of Life
V55.0310 4 points.
Our lives are increasingly influenced
by the availability of new pharmaceuticals, ranging from drugs that
lower cholesterol to those that influence behavior. This course examines
the chemistry and biology of biomolecules that make up the molecular
machinery of the cell. Critical to the
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FOUNDATIONS
OF
SCIENTIFIC
INQUIRY
sections: (1) Evolution of Life: How
did life come to be what it is today?
(2) Life’s Diversity: What is life like
today on the global scale? (3) Cycles
of Matter: How do life and the nonliving environment interact? (4) The
Human Guild: How are humans
changing the biosphere, and how
might we consider our future within
the biosphere? The course includes
laboratory experiments and an exploration at the American Museum of
Natural History.
Natural Science II: Earth, Life,
and Time
V55.0312 4 points.
Over the last four billion years, life
on Earth has evolved in response to
changes in the environment. At the
same time, major innovations in the
history of life have led to transformations of the Earth’s physical environment. The course examines the history of the intimate relationship
between the Earth’s changing environment and the evolution of life on
the planet. This long-term historical
perspective provides a context for
understanding current environmental
issues such as global warming,
tropical deforestation, and loss of
biodiversity.
D E PA RT M E N T O F
French (45)
19
CHAIR OF THE
DEPARTMENT:
Professor Bishop
ASSOCIATE CHAIR:
Professor Beaujour
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Zezula
DIRECTOR OF FRENCH
LANGUAGE PROGRAMS:
Dr. Campbell
Faculty
UNIVERSITY PLACE,
NEW
YORK,
NY
10003-4556.
998-8700.
W
ith a staff of internationally known scholars and teachers, the Department of
French offers an unusually broad range of courses in French and Francophone
studies, language, literature, and civilization. The program is strong and diversified, with emphasis on immersion of the student in foreign culture and language. Most
courses are taught in French. La Maison Française brings French culture into focus with
films, lectures, and concerts as well as library facilities and a periodicals reading room.
Beyond the University community, the student of French can find a number of cultural
activities that broaden understanding of the foreign perspective here in New York City. Students majoring or minoring in French are strongly encouraged to spend at least one semester at the NYU Center in Paris, which offers courses with well-known professors from the
French university system as well as distinguished NYU faculty members.
Professors Emeriti:
Ostrovsky, Sorkin, Starr
Clinical Associate Professor:
Goldwyn
Professors:
Affron, Beaujour, Bishop, Dash,
Djebar, Doubrovsky, Hollier, Nicole,
Regalado, Sieburth, Vitz
Senior Language Lecturer:
Campbell
Associate Professors:
Bernard, Deneys-Tunney, Elmarsafy,
Zezula
Language Lecturers:
Baehler, Hilly-Lawson
Adjunct Associate Professor:
Wolf
MAJOR
Admission to the program: The
prerequisite for admission to the program is a satisfactory knowledge of
the French language. This is normally interpreted as the satisfactory completion of V45.0030 with the grade
of C or better. In addition, students
planning to major in French studies
(program 1 or 2) must have successfully completed V45.0115 or
V45.0163 prior to being admitted to
the program. Independent studies
and internships do not count toward
the French major, except when taken
Visiting Professors:
Bellour, Ben Jelloun, Finas, Gaillard,
Genette, Hersant, Robbe-Grillet,
Roger, Scharfman
Instructors:
Abad, Arnaud, Balavoine, Carpenter,
Cavaness, Coulmont, Daff, Gamble,
Granger-Remy, Hellinger, Reeck,
Waskiewicz
Adjunct Instructor:
Lanier
Assistant Professor:
Gerson
Program
(212)
as part of the honors program in
French studies, or with special permission of the department. Transfer
students must complete at least five
of the nine courses required for the
French major at the College or at
New York University in Paris. All
majors must register with the department and consult a departmental
adviser prior to any registration.
Note: No grade lower than C
may be counted toward the major.
The overall grade point average in
French courses must be 2.5 or above.
Programs of study: Qualified
students may choose one of five pro-
grams of study. They may concentrate in French language and literature; French language, society, and
culture; Francophone studies;
Romance languages; or French and
linguistics.
Program 1. Emphasis on
French language and literature:
Nine courses beyond V45.0030. This
plan of study normally consists of
three courses in advanced language
(e.g., V45.0101, V45.0102,
V45.0105, V45.0106, V45.0107,
V45.0109, V45.0110); four courses
in literature (including V45.0115
and at least one advanced course in
FRENCH
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129
literature prior to 1800); one course
in civilization; and the senior seminar. With departmental approval, a
student may substitute one cognate
course appropriate to his or her plan
of study. Such cognate courses may
be drawn from among the advanced
undergraduate courses offered by the
department or from the list of French
graduate courses open to seniors. For
general requirements, please see
under “Graduate Courses Open to
Undergraduates,” below.
Program 2. Emphasis on
French language, society, and culture: Nine courses beyond
V45.0030. This plan of study normally consists of three courses in
advanced language (e.g., V45.0101,
V45.0102, V45.0105, V45.0106,
V45.0107, V45.0109, or V45.0110);
four courses in civilization (including
V45.0163 and V45.0164); one
course in literature; and the senior
seminar. With departmental
approval, a student may substitute
one cognate course appropriate to his
or her plan of study. The cognate
course may be drawn from among
the advanced undergraduate courses
offered by the department; from
departments and programs such as
anthropology, economics, fine arts,
history, Medieval and Renaissance
studies, music, politics, and sociology; or from the list of French graduate courses and the courses offered in
the Institute of French Studies open
to seniors. For general requirements,
please see under “Graduate Courses
Open to Undergraduates,” below.
Program 3. Emphasis on Francophone studies: Nine courses
beyond V45.0030. This plan of study
normally consists of three courses in
advanced language (e.g., V45.0101,
V45.0102, V45. 0105, V45.0106,
V45.0107, V45.0109, V45.0110);
four courses in Francophone studies;
one course in French literature or civilization; and the senior seminar.
With departmental approval, a student may substitute one cognate
course appropriate to his or her plan
of study. Such cognate courses may be
drawn from among the advanced
undergraduate courses offered by the
department or from the list of French
graduate courses open to seniors. For
general requirements, please see
under “Graduate Courses Open to
Undergraduates,” below.
Program 4. Romance language
major: Nine courses distributed
between two languages—a combination of either French-Spanish, French130
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FRENCH
Italian, or Spanish-Italian. The major
consists of (1) and (2) one conversation course in each of the two languages (V45.0101 or V45.0102 and
V95.0101); (3) and (4) one composition course in each of the two languages (V45.0105 or V45.0106 and
V95.0106); (5) and (6) one masterpieces of literature course or one civilization course in each of the two languages (V45.0115, V45.0163, or
V45.0164 and V95.0811, V95.0815,
V95.0762, or V95.0261); and (7),
(8), and (9) three upper-level language or literature courses in a combination of the two languages.
Note: The same general requirements will be followed for FrenchItalian and Spanish-Italian. See
Department of Italian listings for
specific course requirements and prerequisites in Italian.
There are six required courses in a
combination of conversation, composition, and a masterpieces of literature or civilization in each language.
The last three upper-level literature
or language courses may be chosen
freely. According to these requirements, the distribution of courses
should be four in one language and
five in the other.
Program 5. Major in French
and linguistics: Eight courses
beyond V45.0030 and V61.0001,
respectively. This plan of study normally consists of the following courses: one course in Spoken Contemporary French (V45.0101 or
V45.0102); one course in advanced
written French (V45.0105,
V45.0106, V45.0107, or V45.0110);
and two courses in French literature
(in French) to be determined in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies. The linguistics part
of this major may be satisfied by taking one course (beyond V61.0001) in
each of the following four areas: phonetics/phonology, syntax, historical
linguistics, and sociolinguistics.
Note: A student who fulfills the
requirements of program 1 or 2 may
thereby fulfill the state minimum
requirements of 24 credits in order to
be certified to teach French in New
York State junior or senior high
schools. For general requirements,
please see under Preprofessional,
Accelerated, and Specialized Programs.
MINOR
All students who wish to minor in
the Department of French must register with the department and con-
sult a departmental adviser prior to
any registration.
Programs of study: Students
may choose one of four programs of
study. They may minor in French
studies, French literature in translation, literature in translation, or
Francophone studies.
1. French studies: Four courses
conducted in French. This minor
normally consists of four courses
above the intermediate level to be
determined in consultation with the
director of undergraduate studies. No
grade lower than C counts toward
this minor.
2. French literature in translation: Four courses in French literature in translation offered by the
department, to be determined in
consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies. Not open to
French majors. No grade lower than
C counts toward this minor.
3. Literature in translation: See
under Literature in Translation.
4. Francophone studies: Four
courses in Francophone studies, to be
determined in consultation with the
director of undergraduate studies. No
grade lower than C counts toward
this minor.
HONORS PROGRAM IN
FRENCH STUDIES
Eligibility: A student must spend a
minimum of three full semesters in
residence at the College of Arts and
Science. Attendance at New York
University in Paris counts toward
such residence. The student must
maintain a general grade point average of at least 3.5 and a major average of 3.5 or higher.
Requirements:
1. Completion of the major
requirements.
2. An honors paper. The student
should plan to take 4 points of Independent Study, V45.0997 or
V45.0998, under the direction of the
department faculty member with
whom the student wishes to do honors work. The choice of the faculty
member and the subject of the paper
are worked out in consultation with
the faculty member and the director
of undergraduate studies. The honors
paper is a work of scholarship and/or
criticism in a field of French studies.
On the average, it should be from 25
to 50 double-spaced typed pages.
Usually, the paper and the course in
independent study are done at the
start of the senior year.
3. An oral examination at the end
of the senior year based on a reading
list. For general requirements, please
see under Honors and Awards.
INTERNSHIPS
In addition to the basic requirements
for the major, students also have the
opportunity to participate in internships sponsored by the Department
of French. Recent internships have
been completed at the French cultural services office, the French music
office, and the French film office.
ACCELERATED B.A./M.A.
PROGRAM IN FRENCH
STUDIES
The Department of French and the
Institute of French Studies offer
qualified students the opportunity to
earn the B.A. and M.A. degrees in a
shortened period of study. While still
undergraduates, students enrolled in
the program may earn up to 8 points
toward the M.A. by completing two
graduate courses in the Department
of French or at the Institute of
French Studies. In order to earn
advanced standing, these points may
not be counted toward an undergraduate degree but must be in excess of
the 128 points required for the B.A.
Under normal circumstances, this
can be achieved by students who register for the maximum allowable
number of points in their senior year.
Courses
COURSES CONDUCTED IN
FRENCH
Placement in French language
courses: The placement of students
in French language, literature, and
civilization courses is explained
under “Placement Examinations” in
the Academic Policies section of this
bulletin.
Fulfillment of the Morse
Academic Plan (MAP) language
requirement: The language requirement in French may be fulfilled
either by an intensive sequence of
two 6-point courses (V45.0010 and
V45.0020) for a total of 12 points, or
by an extensive sequence of four 4point courses (V45.0001, V45.0002,
V45.0011, and V45.0012) for a total
of 16 points. With departmental
approval, a student may follow a
plan of study combining two 4-point
Earned in this manner, advanced
standing has the additional advantage of enabling qualified students to
start graduate work not only at an
earlier stage but also in the most
cost-efficient way.
Students majoring in French language and literature (program 1) may
apply credits thus earned toward the
M.A. in French literature, which can
be completed in the Department of
French. Students majoring in French
language, society, and culture (program 2) may apply the credits either
toward the M.A. in French language
and civilization offered by the department or toward the M.A. in French
civilization to be completed at the
Institute of French Studies. Students
who plan to enroll at the latter are
expected to earn advanced standing
by selecting from among several core
courses taught at the institute.
Admission to the program is
open to students who have completed 90 points with a grade point average of at least 3.3 and with a cumulative grade point average in the
major of 3.5 or higher. Application
to the program can be made through
the director of undergraduate studies
in French, 19 University Place, 6th
floor. Final acceptance into the graduate sequence of the program is contingent on successful completion of
the B.A., formal admission into the
Graduate School of Arts and Science,
and approval by the director of grad-
uate studies or, in the case of students seeking the M.A. in French
civilization, the director of the Institute of French Studies.
FACILITIES
The University has two special facilities for students of French.
La Maison Française: This
attractive house in the old and picturesque Washington Mews is open
to students of French. It has a comfortable lounge, a small reading
room opening onto a terrace, and a
soundproof music room. Programs of
lectures and recreational activities
free to all students interested in
French are given here.
Institute of French Studies:
Adjacent to La Maison Française in
Washington Mews, the institute
offers graduate courses in contemporary French society and culture that
are open to undergraduates with special permission. The institute has a
large newspaper and periodical collection and a wide range of videotapes;
it also organizes frequent lectures and
seminars by visiting scholars, political personalities, and business and
administrative leaders from France.
NYU IN PARIS
For New York University in Paris,
see information under Programs
Abroad.
courses with one 6-point course
(V45.0001, V45.0002, V45.0020, or
V45.0010, V45.0011, V45.0012) for
a total of 14 points. All students
planning to continue their study of
French beyond the MAP requirement are strongly advised to follow
the intensive sequence since this permits completion of the intermediate
level in two semesters.
Intensive Intermediate French
V45.0020 Prerequisite: V45.0010 or
V45.0001-0002. Open to students who
have completed the equivalent of a year’s
elementary level and to others on assignment by placement test. Completes the
equivalent of a year’s intermediate level
in one semester. 6 points.
INTRODUCTORY LANGUAGE
COURSES
Elementary French I
V45.0001 Open to students with no
previous training in French and to others
on assignment by placement test. Not
equivalent to V45.0010. Only by combining V45.0001 with V45.0002 can
a student complete the equivalent of
V45.0010 and then continue on to the
intermediate level. 4 points.
INTENSIVE SEQUENCE
Intensive Elementary French
V45.0010 Open to students with no
previous training in French and to others
on assignment by placement test. Completes the equivalent of a year’s elementary
level in one semester. 6 points.
EXTENSIVE SEQUENCE
FRENCH
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Elementary French II
V45.0002 Continuation of V45.0001.
In order to continue on to the intermediate
level, a student must complete both
V45.0001 and V45.0002. This
sequence is equivalent to V45.0010.
4 points.
Intermediate French I
V45.0011 Prerequisite: V45.00010002 or V45.0010. Open to students
who have completed the equivalent of a
year’s elementary level and to others on
assignment by placement test. Not equivalent to V45.0020. Only by combining
V45.0011 with V45.0012 can a student complete the equivalent of
V45.0020 and then continue on to the
postintermediate level. 4 points.
Intermediate French II
V45.0012 Continuation of V45.0011.
In order to fulfill the MAP requirement
and continue on to the postintermediate
level, a student must complete both
V45.0011 and V45.0012. This
sequence is equivalent to V45.0020.
4 points.
LANGUAGE COURSES WITH
SPECIAL PREREQUISITES
Intermediate French for Research
V45.0024 Prerequisite: demonstration
of present proficiency in the basics of elementary French either by placement test,
prior course work, or approval of the
department. 3 points.
Specifically designed for students
whose career goals may require
French as a research tool. Intensive
practice in grammar, vocabulary, and
idiomatic structures. Stresses reading
and written (rather than oral) skills.
Translation projects are geared to
students’ individual areas of interest.
Conversation and Composition
V45.0030 Prerequisite: V45.00110012 or V45.0020. Open to students
who have completed the equivalent of a
year’s intermediate level and to others who
have passed the proficiency examination
but who wish to review their French in
order to take advanced courses in language, literature, and civilization.
4 points.
Systematizes and reinforces the language skills presented in earlier-level
courses through an intensive review
of grammar, written exercises, an
introduction to composition, lexical
enrichment, and spoken skills.
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FRENCH
ADVANCED LANGUAGE
COURSES
Spoken Contemporary French
V45.0101 Prerequisite: V45.0030,
assignment by placement test, or approval
of the department. Assumes a mastery of
the fundamental structures of French.
May be taken concurrently with
V45.0105. 4 points.
Helps the student to develop vocabulary, improve pronunciation, and
learn new idiomatic expressions.
Introduction to corrective phonetics
and emphasis on understanding
contemporary French through a
study of such authentic documents as
radio and television interviews,
advertisements, and spontaneous oral
productions.
Advanced Conversation
V45.0102 Prerequisite: V45.0101,
V45.0105, or permission of the department. 4 points.
For students with relative fluency in
French who wish to further strengthen their pronunciation and command
of spoken French. Develops the skills
presented in V45.0101 through an
in-depth study of French phonetics
(corrective and theoretical) and
analysis of the modes of oral discourse in French. Emphasis on
understanding spoken French (modes
of argument, persuasion, and emotion) through analysis of authentic
documents; development of student
discourse in French.
Written Contemporary French
V45.0105 Prerequisite: V45.0030,
assignment by placement test, or approval
of the department. 4 points.
Designed to improve the student’s
written French and to provide
advanced training in French and
comparative grammar. Students are
trained to express themselves in a
variety of writing situations (e.g.,
diaries, transcriptions, narrations, letters). Focuses on the distinction
between spoken and written styles
and the problem of contrastive grammar. Emphasis on accuracy and fluency of usage in the written language.
Advanced Composition
V45.0106 Prerequisite: V45.0105 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Aims to refine the student’s understanding of and ability to manipulate
written French. Students practice
summarizing and expanding articles
from French magazines and papers
and learn how to organize reports
and reviews in French. Exercises are
designed to familiarize students with
various styles, registers, and levels of
diction of written French.
Translation
V45.0107 Prerequisite: V45.0105 or
V45.0106. 4 points.
Practice of translation through
French and English texts taken from
a variety of sources to present a range
of contrastive grammatical and stylistic problems. Also stresses acquisition of vocabulary.
Acting French
V45.0109 Prerequisite: V45.0030,
V45.0101, or permission of the department. 4 points.
Use of dramatic situations and readings to help students overcome inhibitions in their oral use of language.
The graduated series of exercises and
activities is designed to improve pronunciation, intonation, expression,
and body language. These include
phonetic practice, poetry recitation,
skits, improvisation, and memorization of dramatic texts. Reading, discussion, and performance of scenes
from plays by renowned dramatists.
Extensive use of audio and video
material.
Business French
V45.0110 Prerequisite: V45.0030,
V45.0105, or permission of the department. 4 points.
Designed for students who wish to
learn the specialized language used in
French business. Emphasis on oral
and written communication and the
acquisition of a business and commercial vocabulary dealing with the
varied activities of a commercial firm
(e.g., advertising, transportation,
banking). Stresses group work in simulated business situations and exposure to authentic spoken materials.
LITERATURE AND
CIVILIZATION COURSES
CONDUCTED IN FRENCH
The following courses are open to
students who have successfully completed V45.0101 or V45.0105, who
are assigned by placement test, or
who have the permission of the
director of undergraduate studies.
Masterpieces of French Literature
V45.0115 Students planning to major
in French studies are strongly advised to
complete V45.0101, V45.0105, or the
equivalent prior to taking this course.
4 points.
Introduction to French literature and
thought in their historical dimension
through a close study of selected
masterpieces from the Middle Ages
to the 20th century. Special emphasis
on the aesthetic and intellectual
currents that have shaped French
literature.
French Society and Culture from
the Middle Ages to the Present
V45.0163 4 points.
Retrospective and introspective view
of French civilization from early periods to World War II through the
interrelation and interaction of fine
arts, music, philosophy, literature,
and history. Study of major trends,
personalities, and events; search for a
meaning and a definition of what
constitutes the cultural heritage of
France. Primary sources and documents such as chroniques, mémoires,
journaux, revues, and correspondance.
Contemporary France
V45.0164 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0864.
When offered in English, it is also open
to French majors who read the works in
the original and do their written work in
French. 4 points.
The concept of “French civilization”
in both its mythical and real aspects.
Gives the student considerable
knowledge about the economic and
social features of contemporary
France. Uses the comparative
approach between French and American culture.
LITERATURE AND
CIVILIZATION COURSES
CONDUCTED IN FRENCH
WITH SPECIAL
PREREQUISITES
The following courses, conducted in
French, are open to students who
have successfully completed
V45.0115 or V45.0163, who are
assigned by placement test, or who
have the approval of the department.
Versailles: Life as Art in the Age
of Grandeur
V45.0150 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0850.
When offered in English, it is also open
to French majors who read the works in
the original and do their written work in
French. 4 points.
Fabulous Versailles, the synthesis of
baroque and classical aesthetics and
the cult of kingship, introduces
study of major aspects of 17th- and
18th-century culture and French
influence on European civilization.
Views the intellectual, artistic, and
social complexities of the period
through the works of contemporary
philosophers, dramatists, artists,
memorialists, and historians from
Descartes to Voltaire. Films, field
trips, and multimedia presentations
of music and art.
Classicism
V45.0462 4 points.
Studies French classical literature as
one of the summits of the struggle of
human beings to understand themselves and their place in the universe.
Authors studied include Descartes,
Pascal, Madame de Sévigné, Madame
de Lafayette, La Fontaine, Molière,
Corneille, Racine, La Bruyère, and
La Rochefoucauld.
The 18th-Century French Novel
V45.0532 4 points.
The novel comes into its own during
the 18th century. It fought for recognition as a “worthy genre.” The
development of the novel as an aesthetic form and the social and moral
preoccupations it reveals are studied
in a variety of authors such as
Marivaux, Voltaire, Diderot,
Rousseau, Laclos, and Sade.
French Thought from Montaigne
to Sartre
V45.0562 4 points.
Deals with the various currents of
ideas and the transformations in values, taste, and feeling that constitute
the Enlightenment in France. Particular attention to the personality,
writings, and influence of the following authors: Montaigne, Descartes,
Montesquieu, Voltaire, Diderot,
Rousseau, and Sartre. Significant
works by these thinkers and others
are closely read and interpreted.
The Romantic Sensibility in
France
V45.0611 4 points.
Self-consciousness in the romantic
revolution. Study of the experimental
nature of poetry, novel, and theatre
as expressions of the period’s obsessive introspection, its celebration of
nature, and its sense of history. Also
considers romanticism in painting
and music. Chateaubriand, Constant,
Lamartine, Vigny, Musset, Hugo,
and Nerval.
19th-Century French Novel and
Society
V45.0632 4 points.
Study of Balzac, Stendhal, Flaubert,
and Zola as a means of identifying
the individual’s changing relationship to the environment and the
social, political, and intellectual contexts of his or her epoch. Problems of
19th-century novel, narrative structure, point of view, invention, and
observation.
Contemporary French Theatre
V45.0721 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0821 and is
identical to V30.0270. 4 points.
French theatre at the end of the 19th
century and the major innovations of
the great directors in the early 20th
century. Jarry’s Ubu Roi as a rupture
with the past. Cocteau as a major
innovator in technique and in treatment of themes from Greek mythology. The theatre of imagination:
Giraudoux and Anouilh. The survival of classicism: Montherlant. The
theatre of ideas along the existentialist lines of Camus, Sartre, and
Anouilh. The theatre of the absurd
presenting a new vision of man in
the world: Ionesco and Beckett.
Plays are analyzed with respect to
structure, technique, themes, and
language.
Literature and the Arts in the
Age of Surrealism
V45.0722 4 points.
The historical framework of this
course is the period between the two
World Wars, a time in which the
spirit of surrealism dominated the
intellectual and artistic aspects of
French culture. Studies the “surrealist revolution” through both detailed
analyses of texts by Breton, Aragon,
Eluard, and Desnos and of painting
and cinema. Explores the relation
between theory and practice in literature and the arts.
FRENCH
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Contemporary French Novel
V45.0731 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0831.
4 points.
The major French novelists of the
20th century have moved the novel
away from the traditional 19th-century concept. Proust and Gide developed a first-person-singular narrative
in which the reader is participant.
Breton uses the novel for a surrealist
exploration. With Céline and
Malraux, the novel of violent action
becomes a mirror of man’s situation
in a chaotic time and leads to the
work of Sartre and Camus, encompassing the existentialist viewpoint.
Covers Beckett’s sparse, complex narratives and Robbe-Grillet’s “new”
novels. Novels are studied with
respect to structure, technique,
themes, language, and significant
passages.
French Poetry from Baudelaire to
the Present
V45.0741 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0841.
4 points.
Major trends in French poetry from
the late 19th century to the present.
Beginning with the precursors of
contemporary poetry in France and
other countries—Baudelaire, Rimbaud, Mallarmé, and Laforgue—
innovation is studied in the 20thcentury writers: Apollinaire and the
New Spirit; the surrealist poets,
including Aragon and Breton; SaintJohn Perse; Michaux and exorcism
through the word; Ponge and the
world of things; and the postwar
poets. Includes textual analysis, poetic theory, and relationships of the
works to their literary environment.
New Novel and New Theatre
V45.0763 4 points.
Reaction in the post-World War II
novel against traditional 19th-century novels. The novelist no longer
controls his characters but limits
himself to what can be seen. Emphasis on the world of objects and the
difficulty of literary creation. The
novels of Robbe-Grillet, Butor, Sarraute, Duras, Simon, and Pinget. On
stage, the theatre of the absurd, antirealistic, with startling techniques,
downgrading of language, and a
stress on action; the theme of lack of
communication in the world. The
theories of Artaud and the plays of
Ionesco, Beckett, Genet, Adamov,
Vian, and others.
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Proust
V45.0771 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0871.
When this course is offered in English, it
is also open to French majors who read
the work in the original and do their
written work in French. 4 points.
Reading of Remembrance of Things
Past. Major topics include the novel
as confession, the unconscious and
creation, perception and language,
sexuality, decadence, the artistic climate in Europe and France from the
end of the 19th century through
World War I, and the hero as artist.
Beckett
V45.0774 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0874.
4 points.
Study of Samuel Beckett’s diverse
work and the unifying element of the
human condition as two complementary components—the impossibility
of existence and the need to voice
that impossibility. Works include
Molloy, The Unnamable, Waiting for
Godot, Endgame, Cascando, Not I, How
It Is, Krapp’s Last Tape, and First Love.
Theatre in the French Tradition
V45.0929 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0829.
When offered in English, it is also open
to French majors who read the works in
the original and do their written work in
French. 4 points.
Study of the theatrical genre in
France, including the golden age
playwrights (Corneille, Racine,
Molière); 18th-century irony and
sentiment; and the 19th-century
theatrical revolution. Topics include
theories of comedy and tragedy;
development of stagecraft; romanticism and realism; and the theatre as a
public genre, its relationship to taste
and fashion, and its sociopolitical
function.
The Image of Human Experience
in the French Novel
V45.0932 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0832.
When offered in English, it is also open
to French majors who read the works in
the original and do their written work in
French. 4 points.
Man’s attempt to come to terms with
himself and his universe has been the
central impetus of all great literature.
Covers the changing image of man
through the centuries in the works of
French writers of international
repute: Voltaire in his philosophical
tales; Diderot as a precursor of the
modern novel; Stendhal in The Red
and the Black; Flaubert in Madame
Bovary; and Proust, Camus, and
Beckett, all of whom have attempted
to define man in relation to the
major problems of his existence.
Women Writers in France
V45.0935 Identical to V97.0935.
When conducted in English, this course is
numbered V45.0835. When offered in
English, it is also open to French majors
who read the works in the original and
do their written work in French.
4 points.
The rich and diverse literary works
by women express their individuality
and their important social and cultural role in France from the 12th
century to the present. The course
studies both the changing sociohistorical context of these writers and
the common problems and themes
that constitute a female tradition.
Writers include Marie de France,
Christine de Pisan, Marguerite de
Navarre, Mme. de Sévigné,
Germaine de Staël, George Sand,
Colette, Simone de Beauvoir, and
Marguerite Duras.
Modern Criticism and Theory of
Literature
V45.0863 Prerequisite: two advanced
literature courses. 4 points.
Introduction to contemporary methods of criticism and an approach to
problems in the theory of literature.
Readings of a few primary authors
such as Racine, Proust, Baudelaire,
and Flaubert who have recently been
the object of major critical reevaluation, along with the works of such
pertinent critics as Mauron, Jakobson,
Sartre, and Barthes. Emphasis is
on a clear understanding of the critical methods and their theoretical
implications.
Topics in French Culture
V45.0965 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0865.
4 points.
Courses on subjects of special interest
by either a regular or visiting faculty
member. For specific courses, please
consult the class schedule. Recent
topics include Paris in history, art, and
literature; advanced La Belle Époque;
Paris and the birth of modernism.
Topics in French Literature
V45.0968 When conducted in English,
this course is numbered V45.0868.
4 points.
Courses on subjects of special interest
by either a regular or visiting faculty
member. For specific courses, please
consult the class schedule. Recent
topics include French 17th-century
masterpieces and the theatre of the
absurd.
Internship in French
V45.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Offers upper-level students the
opportunity to apply their studies to
the “outside world.” Working closely
with a sponsor and a faculty adviser,
students pursue internships in such
diverse areas as international trade,
banking, publishing, and law. Interested students should apply to the
department early in the semester
before they wish to begin their
internship.
Senior Seminar
V45.0991, 0992 Prerequisite: open to
majors in French studies, or with special
permission of the department. 4 points per
term.
Independent Study
V45.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
COURSES CONDUCTED IN
ENGLISH
The following courses, numbered in
the V45.0800s, are conducted in
English and may be counted toward
the minor in French literature in
translation and the minor in literature in translation, both of which are
described under Literature in Translation. No knowledge of French is
required.
Contemporary French Theatre
V45.0821 Identical to V30.0270.
When conducted in French, this course is
numbered V45.0721. Does not count
toward the major in French if taken in
English. 4 points.
For description, see Contemporary
French Theatre, V45.0721, above.
Metaphors of Modern Theatre
V45.0822 Identical to V30.0267.
2 points.
A close reading of the classics of contemporary theatre, with emphasis on
their use of vivid metaphors of the
human condition and the theatre as
metaphor and artistic process. Analyzes plays in detail, thematically
and stylistically. Views each play as a
highlight of nonrealistic theatre and
as a brilliant example of the sensibilities of European artists and thinkers
in the period beginning just after
World War I (Pirandello) to World
War II (Sartre) and the postwar
period, the post-Hiroshima generation (Beckett).
Theatre in the French Tradition
V45.0829 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0929. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
4 points.
For description, see Theatre in the
French Tradition, V45.0929, above.
Contemporary French Novel
V45.0831 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0731. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. 4 points.
For description, see Contemporary
French Novel, V45.0731, above.
The Image of Human Experience
in the French Novel
V45.0832 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0932. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
4 points.
For description, see The Image of
Human Experience in the French
Novel, V45.0932, above.
Women Writers in France
V45.0835 Identical to V97.0935.
When conducted in French, this course is
numbered V45.0935. Does not count
toward the major in French if taken in
English. Exceptionally, with the permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French majors
who read the works in the original and
do their written work in French.
4 points.
For description, see Women Writers
in France, V45.0935, above.
French Poetry from Baudelaire to
the Present
V45.0841 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0741. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. 4 points.
For description, see French Poetry
from Baudelaire to the Present,
V45.0741, above.
Versailles: Life as Art in the Age
of Grandeur
V45.0850 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0150. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
No knowledge of French is required for
students who are not majoring in French.
4 points.
For description, see Versailles: Life as
Art in the Age of Grandeur,
V45.0150, above.
Contemporary France
V45.0864 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0164. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
No knowledge of French is required for
students who are not majoring in French.
4 points.
For description, see Contemporary
France, V45.0164, above.
Topics in French Culture
V45.0865 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0965.
4 points.
The department offers occasional
courses on subjects of special interest
to either a regular or visiting faculty
member. For specific courses, please
consult the master course list.
La Belle Époque: Modes of
Artistic Expression and Life
V45.0866 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0166. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
No knowledge of French is required for
students who are not majoring in French.
4 points.
Focuses on the dazzling cultural life
of turn-of-the-century Paris. Explores
the ascent of symbolism, postimpressionism, art nouveau, cubism, futurism, and other creative concepts.
Views the social, intellectual, and
artistic aspects of the period through
the works of contemporary writers,
FRENCH
•
135
dramatists, and artists such as Zola,
Huysmans, Maupassant, Proust,
Colette, Apollinaire, ToulouseLautrec, Cézanne, Picasso, Debussy,
Diaghilev, Sarah Bernhardt, and
Gertrude Stein. Extensive use of
audio and video material.
Beckett
V45.0874 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0774. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. 4 points.
For description, see Beckett,
V45.0774, above.
Existentialism and the Absurd
V45.0867 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0767. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. 4 points.
For description, see Existentialism
and the Absurd, V45.0767, above.
INTERDISCIPLINARY
COURSES
Topics in French Literature
V45.0868 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0968.
4 points.
The department offers occasional
courses on subjects of special interest
to either a regular or visiting faculty
member. For specific courses, please
consult the class schedule.
Proust
V45.0871 When conducted in French,
this course is numbered V45.0771. Does
not count toward the major in French if
taken in English. Exceptionally, with the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies, this course is open to French
majors who read the works in the original and do their written work in French.
No knowledge of French is required for
students who are not majoring in French.
4 points.
For description, see Proust,
V45.0771, above.
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•
FRENCH
The Department of French sponsors
the following interdisciplinary courses and, in some cases, cosponsors
them with other departments. No
knowledge of French is required.
Courses may be counted toward the
minor in French literature in translation or the minor in literature in
translation but not toward the major
in French.
The Age of Romanticism
V45.0501 Identical to V29.0501.
4 points.
Designed to examine a specific period of European culture and history in
several distinct national traditions,
through a variety of methodologies.
The focus is both broad and specific.
The uniqueness of separate romantic
manifestations (prose, poetry, theatre,
music, and the plastic arts) as well as
the relationships between them constitute the core of inquiry.
Cinema and Literature
V45.0883 Identical to V30.0504.
Offered by the Department of French.
Conducted in English. Does not count
toward the major in French but does
count toward the minor in French literature in translation or the minor in literature in translation. 4 points.
Exposes the student to various
modes, such as expressionism, social
realism, and the projection of the
hero. One film is viewed per week
and analyzed with reading assignments that include novels, plays, and
poems. The objective is to exploit
the potentiality of different media
and to make vivid and intellectual
the climate of Europe on which these
media so often focus.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Courses in the Graduate School of
Arts and Science are open to seniors
with a 3.0 average in three 4-point
courses (12 points) of advanced work
in French. If these courses are offered
toward the requirements for the baccalaureate degree, no advanced credit
is allowed for them in the graduate
school. Before registering for these
courses, students must obtain the
permission of the director of undergraduate studies.
A complete list of graduate
courses open to qualified seniors is
available in the department each
semester.
PROGRAM IN
Freshman Honors Seminars (50)
1 0 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E E A S T, R O O M 9 0 8 , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 8 8 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 1 1 0 .
T
he Freshman Honors Seminars program offers select freshmen the opportunity to be
in a small, intellectually stimulating class taught by a distinguished faculty member or eminent visitor.
These seminars aim to introduce students, at the beginning of their college careers,
to demanding and challenging standards of analysis and argumentation, oral as well as written. They do so by means of intensive discussion, papers on focused topics, and reading that
emphasizes critical interpretation rather than absorption of information. Except where
noted, the seminars do not assume any specific course or background on the student’s part.
Enrollment is usually limited to 16 students.
As a rule, the seminars are given only in the fall semester. The array of seminars
changes from year to year. A brochure describing all the fall offerings and their instructors
appears in late spring. Below is a sampling of Freshman Honors Seminars that have been
taught more than once in recent years.
Courses
The Serotonin System: The
Master Regulator of the Brain
V50.0201 Azmitia. 4 points.
The human brain, one of the most
fascinating and challenging frontiers
in modern science, contains hundreds
of individual chemical systems that
form interacting networks adapted
for the survival of the organism and
the species. This course focuses on
the cells that release a small aminoacid derivative called serotonin. Serotonin has been implicated in a vast
array of functions, ranging from
aggression, sexual behavior, sleeping,
and learning to regulation of hormone release, eating, and neurotrophic factor secretion. Many
mind-altering drugs (LSD, psilocybin, MDMA, cocaine, alcohol, etc.)
act on serotonin neurons. In humans,
serotonin dysfunction is associated
with such mental disorders as bulimia, depression, autism, Down’s syndrome, and Alzheimer’s disease. The
course assumes no prior knowledge
of neuroscience. Its interdisciplinary
approach crosses traditional fields
like biology, chemistry, psychology,
anthropology, pharmacology, anatomy, neurology, and psychiatry. Readings and discussions are complemented by laboratory visits, demonstrations, and films.
Exploring Reader Theory
V50.0204 Maynard. 4 points.
This seminar seeks to develop students’ awareness of the range of critical theories and critical approaches
that pay special attention to the role
of the reader, a universal critical issue
most recently given the label of reader response theory and criticism with
a cognate development in reception
theory. The seminar seeks not to
inculcate one discourse of reader-oriented criticism or one practical
approach to assessing the role of the
reader in interpretation. Rather, the
student is encouraged to read widely
in the theoretical literature and
applied criticism in order to determine to what extent this range of
critical focus can be useful in developing his or her critical stance. Topics
considered include the following:
Where is meaning? In the text? In
FRESHMAN
the reader? In both together? What
do we mean by author’s intention and
how does it/would it work? What are
the (many) ways in which we can
respond to the text? How is reception
of texts reshaped by changing readers
and cultural history? Students are
encouraged to experiment with applications of theoretical ideas to their
own interpretations of works of literature and to reflect critically on what
they have done. No prior work in
theory is required or expected.
New York City Baseball in the
20th Century
V50.0206 Prince. 4 points.
Baseball is neither a metaphor for life
nor a perfect explanation for the
uniqueness of American culture or
American character. But sport—and,
for some cogent reasons, baseball in
particular—does provide a way into
an examination of major contemporary historical questions in the areas
of race, gender, and class. The Brooklyn Dodgers’ pioneering role in
American racial integration in the
years after World War II, for exam-
HONORS
SEMINARS
•
137
ple, and the Yankees’ early failure to
follow suit provide useful laboratories for a study of race. The strongly
macho character of baseball reveals
basic gender aspirations and prejudices more subtly evoked in other
areas of American life. To the extent
that baseball is indeed a workingclass game, fan involvement reveals
much about the nature of urban class
values and tensions in the 20th century. A full-length baseball-related
research paper is required.
Computer Simulation
V50.0207 Peskin. 4 points.
This is a hands-on course in which
students learn how to program computers to simulate physical and biological processes. The course meets
alternately in a classroom and in a
computer laboratory setting. The
techniques needed to perform such
simulations are taught in class and
then applied in the laboratory by the
students themselves, who work individually or in teams on computing
projects and report on these projects
to the group as a whole. Students
learn how to make the computer
generate graphics, movies, and
sounds, as needed for presentation of
the results of the different simulations. Examples to be emphasized in
class include the orbits of planets,
moons, comets, and spacecraft; the
spread of diseases in a population;
the production of sound by musical
instruments; and the electrical activity of nerves. Students may draw their
projects from this list or choose other
projects according to individual
interests.
Language and Reality in 20thCentury Science and Literature
V50.0210 Ulfers. 4 points.
The course explores the possibility
that a common ground exists
between the so-called two cultures of
science and the humanities. It posits
the hypothesis of a correlation
between postclassical science (e.g.,
quantum theory) and “postmodern”
literature and philosophy. Among
the key notions examined are
Heisenberg’s “uncertainty principle”
and the “undecidability” of deconstructive theory. The discussion of
these notions, and their implications
in literary works, revolves around
their effect on classical logic, the referential function of language, and the
traditional goal of a complete explanation/description of reality. Readings include selections from the
138
•
FRESHMAN
works of Borges, Kundera, Pirsig,
and Pynchon and from nontechnical
texts on quantum and chaos theories.
The Supreme Court and the
Religion Clauses: Religion and
State in America
V50.0218 Sexton. 4 points.
Should members of the Native American Church be allowed to smoke
peyote at religious ceremonies? Can a
public high school invite a rabbi to
give a benediction and convocation at
graduation? Should a state legislator
rely on his or her religious convictions in forming a view about the
legality of capital punishment or
abortion? The course divides these
questions into three subject areas:
religious liberty; separation of church
and state; and the role of religion in
public and political life. It focuses on
how the Supreme Court has dealt
with these areas and, more important,
invites students to construct a new
vision of the proper relationship
among religion, state, and society in a
20th-century liberal constitutional
democracy.
East and West: Intercultural
Readings in Philosophy and
Literature
V50.0228 Roberts. 4 points.
This seminar concentrates on five
Asian classics (The Analects of Confucius, The Tao Te Ching of Lao-tzu,
Tale of Kieu, Dream of the Red Chamber,
and Tale of Genji) and five Western
classics (the Book of Job, Oedipus,
Oedipus at Colonus, Antigone, and King
Lear). Students are encouraged to
explore the analogies of theme and
character to be found in the works
and to consider how differences of
historical and cultural context affect
the interpretation of the individual
texts. The first set of readings concerns men of age and/or wisdom; the
second set concerns young heroines
of courage and intelligence. A few of
the readings contain figures of both
types.
Family Values, Past and Present
V50.0231 Gordon. 4 points.
During several periods in American
history, “family values” have been
much discussed and disputed. The
years between 1970 and the present
form one such period. Family-related
controversies—such as gay marriage,
divorce, permissive child-raising,
abortion, single motherhood—occupy a prominent place in political
debate today. This seminar arises
HONORS
SEMINARS
from the conviction that a historical
approach can raise the level of these
debates, while family history provides a useful introduction to the
“new social history,” which has significantly changed how history is
being written today. The seminar
examines general changes in American families over the last two centuries, considers racial/ethnic and
class variety in family structure and
behavior, looks in more detail at particular aspects of family life, including childhood, aging, marriage, and
reproduction, and concludes by
rethinking contemporary polemics
from a historical perspective.
First Amendment Freedom of
Expression
V50.0235 Solomon. 4 points.
Conflicts over freedom of speech
erupt into public debate almost every
week. Congress passes a law to purge
indecency from on-line communications. A tobacco company sues a
major television network for libel.
Press disclosures threaten the fairtrial rights of defendants in the
Oklahoma City bombing trial.
Although the First Amendment
appears on its face to prohibit any
governmental restrictions on speech,
the Supreme Court in fact balances
free and open expression against
other vital interests of society. This
course begins by examining the
struggle against seditious libel (the
crime of criticizing government or
its officials) that was not won in this
country until the landmark decision
in New York Times v. Sullivan in
1964. Students examine freedom of
speech through the prism of a rich
variety of contemporary conflicts,
including political dissent that advocates overthrow of the government;
prior restraints against publication;
obscenity and pornography; flag
burning; the new law that bans indecency from on-line services; hate
speech; and inflictions of emotional
distress. Students read and analyze
important decisions of the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The Special Theory of Relativity
V50.0241 Sokal. 4 points.
In 1905 a 26-year-old clerk in the
Swiss patent office published an article entitled “On the Electrodynamics
of Moving Bodies,” which proposed
revolutionary new ideas about space
and time. Or did it? Was Einstein’s
special theory of relativity really a
radical break with the past? Or was
it an essentially conservative updating of ideas going back to Galileo?
This course begins by analyzing the
concepts of space, time, and motion
proposed by Aristotle, Galileo, and
Newton, as well as the challenge to
Newtonian ideas posed by Maxwell’s
electrodynamics. The heart of the
course works through, step by step,
the thought-experiments that led
Einstein to his special theory of relativity. Finally, it works through a
case study in which special relativity
is applied: five original articles from
the early era of elementary-particle
physics (1947-1956), which trace the
phenomenon of “V-particles” from its
first discovery through its subsequent experimental elucidation to a
partial theoretical understanding
(still incomplete today).
Realism and How to Get Rid of It
V50.0244 Bishop. 4 points.
Realism relates both to a permanent
concern of literature and art and to a
“school” that became the dominant
mode of 19th-century artistic expression. In the large sense, realism is
accuracy in the portrayal of life or
reality; referring to the 19th-century
literary movement, realism reflects
the ordinary life of the average person. The realistic novel and theatre
focused on the conflicts and characters familiar to readers and spectators
by means of artistic conventions
relating to the credibility of plot and
characters, the role of narration, and
the function of the reader/spectator.
The 20th century turned its back on
realism through a series of powerful
modernist and avant-garde movements that reacted against linear nar-
FRESHMAN
rative and a literal depiction of reality. Following an examination of
19th-century realism in the novel
and theatre (Balzac, James, and
Ibsen), the seminar stresses 20thcentury reactions (Borges, Beckett,
Robbe-Grillet, Sukenick, Pirandello,
Brecht, Ionesco, Genet, and Pinter).
These reactions include stream-ofconsciousness novel, surrealism,
abstract expressionism, Brechtian
epic theatre, theatre of the absurd,
first-person singular narrative, and
postmodern fiction. Attention is concentrated on form and language, on
conventions, and on the relationship
of the work to the reader or spectator. Film viewings concentrate on
nonnarrative cinema (Renais, Antonioni). The work of realist and nonrealist painters is also discussed.
HONORS
SEMINARS
•
139
PROGRAM IN
Gender and Sexuality Studies (97)
C E N T E R F O R T H E S T U D Y O F G E N D E R A N D S E X U A L I T Y, 2 8 5 M E R C E R S T R E E T,
3RD FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6653. (212) 992-9541.
DIRECTOR OF THE
P RO G R A M:
Professor Dinshaw
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Haney
FA C U LT Y FELLO W:
Assistant Professor
Abdulhadi
Faculty
Programs
T
he Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies offers a broad interdisciplinary investigation of gender and sexuality as keys to understanding human experience. At its
core, the program encourages students to question the meanings of “male” and
“female,” “masculine” and “feminine,” “straight” and “queer,” “deviant” and “normal,” in
both Western and non-Western societies. Courses seek to unravel the ways ideas about gender and sexuality come into being and shape social roles and identities, as well as the ways
in which race, class, and ethnicity function in the experience of gender and sexuality within a culture. The Program in Gender and Sexuality Studies challenges the privileging of
some categories (e.g., male or heterosexual) over others, and analyzes the social and political
implications of such hierarchies. The curriculum makes gender and sexuality central rather
than peripheral terms of analysis and seeks to complicate what is presented as “natural” or
“normal” in traditional academic curricula.
Professors:
Anderson (Spanish and Portuguese),
Cohen (Comparative Literature),
Diner (Hebrew and Judaic),
Dinshaw (English), Gerson (Sociology), Ginsburg (Anthropology),
Gordon (History), Greenberg (Sociology), Harper (English), Heilman
(Psychology), Johnson (History),
Kamm (Philosophy), Kulick
(Anthropology), Martin (Anthropology), Molloy (Spanish and Portuguese), Nolan (History), Hodges
Persell (Sociology), Poovey (English),
Rapp (Anthropology), Ruble (Psy-
chology), Ruddick (Philosophy),
Schieffelin (Anthropology), Walkowitz
(History), Young (History)
(Anthropology), Sternhell (Journalism), Straayer (Cinema Studies), Zito
(Anthropology)
Associate Professors:
Abercrombie (Anthropology),
Deneys-Tunney (French), Dixon
(Sociology), Duggan (American
Studies), Fahmy (Middle Eastern
Studies), Feldman (Hebrew and
Judaic Studies), Freedgood (English),
Harrington (Politics), Hodes (History), Jackson (Sociology), Krauthamer
(History), Levy (History), Muñoz
(Performance Studies), Rogers
Assistant Professors:
Abdulhadi (Gender and Sexuality
Studies), Dopico (Spanish and Portuguese), Haney (Sociology),
McHenry (English), Rust (English)
MAJOR
and sexuality studies (across at least
three disciplines that are not the discipline of the student’s departmental
concentration) and 16 points in the
student’s departmental concentration.
Because 8 of these points may overlap
(V97.0021, for instance, may count
toward both the gender and sexuality
studies major and a concentration in
sociology), some students will complete the major with 40 points.
All majors must complete at least
one of the two introductory-level
courses, Introduction to Gender and
Sexuality Studies (V97.0010) or
Studying Gender, Studying Sexuality
(V97.0011), and Senior Seminar
(V97.0999). Because of the interdisciplinary nature of scholarship in the
subject, remaining gender and sexuality studies electives must be drawn
from at least three different departments or areas.
Individual programs must be
approved by the director of undergraduate studies.
A student who majors in gender and
sexuality studies must also choose a
concentration in any other department within the College of Arts and
Science.
The gender and sexuality studies
major typically requires 48 points (12
courses). Some students, however, may
complete their B.A. requirements
with only 40 points (10 courses). The
major requires 32 points in gender
140
•
GENDER
AND
SEXUALITY
STUDIES
Affiliated Faculty:
Fisher (Steinhardt), Martin (Tisch),
Vorlicky (Tisch)
Professor Emerita:
Sutton (Anthropology)
Courses
MINOR
HONORS
A gender and sexuality studies minor
requires 16 points (four courses)
drawn from at least two different
departments or areas. Minors must
complete Introduction to Gender
and Sexuality Studies (V97.0010) or
Studying Gender, Studying Sexuality
(V97.0011).
Students who wish to pursue honors
work must have and maintain a grade
point average of at least 3.5 both
overall and in the major. Honors
work in gender and sexuality studies
consists of the completion of a semester-long internship in an approved
organization, rigorously adhering to
Introduction to Gender and
Sexuality Studies
V97.0010 Identical to V57.0013 and
V93.0022. 4 points.
Designed to interest and challenge
both the student new to the study of
gender and sexuality and the student
who has taken departmental courses
focusing on women, gender, and/or
sexuality. Through a focus on particular issues and topics, this course
explores the construction of sex, gender, and sexuality; gender asymmetry
in society; sexual normativity and violations of norms; and the interactions
of sex, gender, sexuality, race, class,
and nation. This interdisciplinary
course engages materials and methodologies from a range of media and disciplines, such as literature, the visual
arts, history, sociology, psychology,
and anthropology. Examines both
feminist and nonfeminist arguments
from a variety of critical perspectives.
Minorities and the Media
V97.0016 Identical to V54.0016 and
V11.0016. 4 points.
See description under Journalism (54).
Studying Gender, Studying
Sexuality
V97.0011 Formerly V97.0658. Identical to V57.0658. 4 points.
Designed as a historical introduction,
this course traces the intertwined and
uneven development of the fields of
women’s studies; gender studies;
men’s and masculinity studies; lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
studies; and queer studies in the U.S.
Students read polemical writings,
popular tracts, and scholarly investigations that have contributed to
these fields and are encouraged to
evaluate critically how a canon is
formed around these classic texts.
Students also explore the relationship
of these fields to institutionalizations
of the study of race, class, and nation,
including ethnic studies, area studies, colonial and postcolonial studies,
and investigations of globalization.
Language and Society
V97.0015 Identical to V61.0015.
4 points.
See description under Linguistics (61).
Anthropology of Language
V97.0017 Identical to V14.0017.
4 points.
See description under Anthropology
(14).
Sex and Gender
V97.0021 Identical to V93.0021.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Family and Kinship
V97.0041 Identical to V14.0041.
Beidelman, Blu, Lynch, Myers. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology
(14).
Gender Roles and Behavior
V97.0072 Identical to V89.0072.
4 points.
See description under Psychology (89).
Psychology of Marriage
V97.0079 Identical to V89.0079.
4 points.
See description under Psychology (89).
the guidelines set out by the program
(guidelines are available in Program
in Gender and Sexuality Studies
office). All honors students offer a
presentation describing and analyzing
their experiences to faculty and students in the program.
See description under Anthropology
(14).
Women and Men:
Anthropological Perspectives
V97.0112 Identical to V14.0112.
Beidelman, Ginsburg. 4 points.
See description under Anthropology
(14).
Sex, Gender, and Language
V97.0121 Identical to V61.0021.
4 points.
See description under Linguistics (61).
Literature of the Americas:
Women’s Self-Figuration
V97.0122 Identical to V29.0122.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Gay and Lesbian Performance
V97.0138 Identical to V30.0137 and
H28.0624. 4 points.
See description under Dramatic
Literature, Theatre History, and the
Cinema (30).
Race, Gender, and Citizenship
V97.0092 Identical to V57.0092.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Topics in 20th-Century
Literature: Global Women’s
Writing
V97.0190 Identical to V29.0190.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Topics in American History:
Masculinities
V97.0094 Identical to V57.0094.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Women in European History
Since 1750
V97.0196 Identical to V57.0196.
Nolan. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
Re-Imagining the City: People,
Place, and Power
V97.0102 Identical to V99.0102.
4 points.
See description under Metropolitan
Studies (99).
Social Movements, Protest, and
Conflict
V97.0205 Identical to V93.0205.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Gender, Race, and Sexuality:
Peoples of Latin America
V97.0103 Identical to V14.0103.
Prerequisite: V14.0001 or V55.0515.
Abercrombie. 4 points.
G E N D E R
A N D
Poverty and Income Distribution
V97.0233 Identical to V31.0233.
4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
S E X U A L I T Y
S T U D I E S
•
1 4 1
Sexual Identity and the Urban
Community
V97.0245 Identical to V99.0245.
4 points.
See description under Metropolitan
Studies (99).
The Family
V97.0451 Identical to V93.0451.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Women in the Economy
V97.0252 Identical to V31.0252 and
C31.0252. Prerequisite: V31.0002.
4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
Seminar: Women in Medieval and
Renaissance Europe
V97.0270 Identical to V57.0270.
Johnson. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
Women in the Urban Environment
V97.0290 Identical to V99.0270.
4 points.
See description under Metropolitan
Studies (99).
Sex and the City in Ancient Greece
V97.0293 Identical to V27.0293.
4 points.
See description under Classics (27).
In Her Own Image:
Representations of Asian
American Women
V97.0302 Identical to V15.0302.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Queer Cultures
V97.0419 Prerequisite: V97.0010 or
V97.0011 or permission of instructor.
4 points.
This course develops concepts of
queerness and queer cultures through
historical and theoretical research.
Topics might include the historical
shift from an emphasis on homosexual
acts to homosexual persons; the history of the study of gays and lesbians by
the medical, psychology, and sexology
professions; intersections of race, ethnicity, class, gender, sex, and sexual
orientation in literary and visual texts;
homophobia; hate crimes; outing;
activism; and performativity.
GENDER
AND
Feminism and Theatre
V97.0623 Identical to V30.0240 and
H28.0623. Martin. 4 points.
See description under Dramatic Literature, Theatre History, and the Cinema
(30).
Women in American Society
V97.0635 Identical to V57.0635.
Prerequisite: permission of the instructor.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Race, Gender, and Sexuality in
American History
V97.0655 Identical to V57.0655 and
V11.0655. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
Women and Slavery in the
Americas
V97.0660 Identical to V57.0660.
Krauthamer. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
Gender in Law
V97.0336 Identical to V53.0336.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
•
Gender(s) and Sexualities in
Asian America
V97.0604 Identical to V15.0604.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Women’s Writing in Latin America
V97.0640 Identical to V95.0640.
Taught in Spanish. 4 points.
See description under Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literature (95).
Law and Society
V97.0335 Identical to V53.0335 and
V99.0372. Harrington. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
142
Sexual Diversity in Society
V97.0511 Identical to V93.0511.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Women and War: Contemporary
Arabic Literature and Film
V97.0714 Identical to V77.0714 and
V29.0714. Dallal. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Gender and Judaism
V97.0718 Identical to V78.0718 and
V90.0815. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Women and the Media
V97.0720 Identical to V54.0720.
4 points.
See description under Journalism and
Mass Communication (54).
SEXUALITY
STUDIES
Gender, Identity, and Society in
the Middle East
V97.0729 Identical to V77.0729.
Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011
and one introductory-level course in the
social sciences, or permission of instructor.
4 points.
Explores the historical and contemporary conditions of Middle Eastern
women, including the effects of colonialism, decolonization, nationalism,
revolution, and war. Looks at the
political economies, religious movements, and cultural norms that seek
to define, restrict, or expand women’s
roles and rights. Interrogates the
ways in which different groups of
Middle Eastern women express
themselves, struggle for their lives,
and negotiate their identities.
Theories of Gender and Sexuality
V97.0742 Prerequisite: V97.0010 or
V97.0011 or V97.0021 or permission
of instructor. 4 points.
Allows students to explore theoretical
issues in gender and sexuality studies
on an advanced level. Theoretical arenas vary and may include feminist
theory; queer theory; psychoanalysis;
postcolonial theory; border theory;
social movements; postmodernism;
performativity; theories of history,
culture, and representation; intersectionality. See course schedule for current description.
Gender, Nation, and the Colonial
Condition
V97.0744 Prerequisite: V97.0010 or
V97.0011 or permission of instructor.
4 points.
This advanced-level course is an
interdisciplinary and comparative
inquiry into the historical and contemporary linkages between gender
dynamics, the culture of nationalism,
and the politics of colonialism on an
international scale. The course studies
different perspectives on the national
question—as a liberation movement,
as a political ideology, and as a mechanism for inclusion/exclusion.
Queer Literature
V97.0749 Formerly V97.0700 and
V41.0700. Identical to V41.0749.
Prerequisites: one course in literature,
V97.0010 or V97.0011, or permission
of instructor. 4 points.
This course develops notions of
queerness—deviation from a sexed
and gendered norm—through
detailed exploration of literary texts
in a variety of genres. Historical period and national focus (British, Amer-
ican, Commonwealth) may vary; consult the schedule of classes for current focus.
Representations of Women
V97.0755 Identical to V41.0755.
4 points.
See description under English (41).
Israeli Women Writers
V97.0783 Identical to V78.0783.
Taught in Hebrew. Feldman. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Women in Islamic Law
V97.0784 Identical to V77.0783.
Haykel. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Border Crossing: Gender, Sexuality, and Migration
V97.0817 Identical to V57.0817.
Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011
and one introductory-level course in the
social sciences, or permission of instructor.
4 points.
This advanced-level course, a crosscultural and comparative seminar,
examines how border crossing in the
age of accelerated globalization shapes
the gendered construction of
exiled/displaced communities. A combination of conceptual frameworks
and case studies places the experiences
of displaced and refugee women at the
center of intellectual enquiry.
Topics in Women’s History
V97.0820 Identical to V57.0820.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Women and the Novel
V97.0830 Identical to V29.0830.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Sex, Gender, and Globalization
V97.0833 Prerequisites: V97.0010 or
V97.0011 and one introductory social
sciences course, or permission of instructor.
4 points.
If pushed to choose a single term to
describe this historical moment,
many might choose “globalization”
to describe the contemporary world.
Everything seems to be “going global”—media, markets, movements.
Have sex and gender “gone global”
as well? This course approaches this
question by identifying key concepts
and frameworks in the field of feminist geography. Specific issues
include transnational queer commu-
nities, international reproductive
politics, sex tourism, and cybersex.
Theory of the Avant-Garde:
Writing for Their Lives—Women
and Modernism
V97.0841 Identical to V29.0841.
4 points.
See description under Comparative
Literature (29).
Transgender: Histories,
Identities, Politics
V97.0848 Identical to V14.0848.
Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011
and one introductory-level course in the
social sciences, or permission of instructor.
4 points.
This course investigates transgender
identities, movements, and communities as they have arisen in particular historical, political, social, and
cultural conditions. At the heart of
this course is a series of questions
about transgender’s origins, enabling
functions, exclusions, problems, and
possibilities.
Gender and Development: The
Political Economy of Sex and
Gender
V97.0849 Identical to V14.0849.
Prerequisites: V97.0010 or V97.0011
and one introductory-level course in the
social sciences, or permission of instructor.
4 points.
This advanced-level course tackles
development theory and the effects of
development policies on people’s lives,
including such questions as whether
developmental policies are genderneutral and whether the study of
“development” should be the exclusive
domain of the Third World. Focusing
on rethinking development, we examine the intellectual roots of development theory to understand how this
socioeconomic process has been conceptualized and implemented.
Sexual Rights, Sexual Wrongs:
Pornography, Sex Work, and
Other Controversies
V97.0853 4 points.
This course introduces undergraduate students to the central concepts
of “sexual rights,” which has
emerged recently from both community action and multidisciplinary
academic perspectives. Through an
exploration of academic, legal, and
activist perspectives, students are
encouraged to formulate analyses of a
variety of themes, such as women’s
sexual rights, migration and sexuality, heterosexuality, HIV and public
G E N D E R
A N D
health, gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender rights, sex work, and pornography and the “sex wars.”
Women Writers in France
V97.0935 Identical to V45.0935.
When conducted in English, this course is
numbered V97.0835 and is identical to
V45.0835. 4 points.
See description under French (45).
Seminar: Gender and Deviance
V97.0938 Identical to V93.0938.
Prerequisite: four courses in sociology or
written permission of instructor. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Topics in French Literature:
The Image of Women in French
Literature
V97.0968 Identical to V45.0968.
4 points.
See description under French (45).
Internship in Gender and
Sexuality Studies
V97.0980 (fall), 0981 (spring) Open
to gender and sexuality studies majors
and minors only. Prerequisites: permission
of the director of undergraduate studies
and the professor who will supervise the
internship, plus completion of at least one
gender and sexuality studies course. 2 or
4 points per term.
Students are placed with an organization or business specializing in gender and sexuality issues and develop
a reading list in context of which
they evaluate their experience in a
final paper. Students wishing to pursue honors in gender and sexuality
studies must take a 4-point internship. See “Honors,” above.
Topics in Gender and Sexuality
Studies
V97.0996 4 points.
In-depth study of a particular problem or research area within gender
and sexuality studies. See course
schedule for current topic.
Independent Study
V97.0997 (fall), 0998 (spring) Prerequisite: permission of the director of
undergraduate studies. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Senior Seminar
V97.0999 Prerequisites: senior status
in the major or permission of instructor.
4 points.
An advanced interdisciplinary course
in theory and research, exploring
tensions, debates, and methodologies
in the study of gender and sexuality.
Culminates in a research project.
S E X U A L I T Y
S T U D I E S
•
1 4 3
D E PA RT M E N T O F
German (51)
19 UNIVERSITY PLACE, NEW YORK, NY 10003-4556. (212) 998-8650.
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Ronell
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor Ulfers
DIRECTOR OF LANGUAGE
PROGRAMS:
Dr. Schultz
Faculty
T
he department’s undergraduate program offers a broad range of courses in the language, cultures, and literatures of German-speaking countries. Students may choose
among three majors: German language and literature; German studies; and German
and linguistics. Minor programs are available in German language and in German literature in translation.
Along with its German language programs, the department offers interdisciplinary
courses taught in English, which address issues of German culture, history, philosophy, science, art, and literature for students who do not have German language skills. An extensive
program of individualized study, with flexible credit and meeting options, allows students
to work one-on-one with faculty members to pursue topics of individual interest.
The department sponsors the activities of the German Club and of the Tau Chapter of Delta Phi Alpha, the national German honor society, as well as a series of annual
awards in recognition of outstanding achievement by undergraduate students in the study
of German language and literature. Deutsches Haus, the German cultural center at NYU,
provides a varied program of films, concerts, lectures, and exhibitions.
The Department of German places high priority on fostering personal contact
between faculty and students, maintains relatively small class sizes (15 or fewer students on
average), and offers comfortable spaces for socializing, studying, and holding informal meetings. Advanced courses and some basic language courses are taught by full-time faculty
members, all of whom are also involved in student advising.
Professors Emeriti:
Becker, Guilloton, Herzfeld-Sander,
Sander
Professors:
Hüppauf, Ronell
Programs
The prerequisite for all majors in the
department is the completion of
German language training through
the intermediate level (V51.0004 or
V51.0020). Students who have
received equivalent language training elsewhere may satisfy the prereq-
144
•
GERMAN
Associate Professors:
Baer, Geulen, Ulfers
Adjunct Associate Professor:
Cohen
Assistant Professor:
Fleming
Instructor:
Pomerantsev
Senior Language Lecturer:
Schultz
uisite through the departmental
placement examination. Students
who wish to major or minor in German must register with the department and have their programs
approved by the director of undergraduate studies or the director of
language programs. Majors and
minors will be assigned a departmental adviser, with whom they
should consult before registering
each semester.
MAJOR PROGRAMS
The major in German requires eight
4-point courses (total of 32 points)
taken at the 100 level or higher. It is
recommended that all majors complete a composition course
(V51.0111 or V51.0114) and
V51.0152, Introduction to German
Literature, before enrolling in higher-level seminars.
Eligible students may use either
V51.0500, Honors Thesis, or
V51.0501, Honors Seminar, to satisfy one of the major requirements (see
the “Honors Program” description).
With the permission of the director
of undergraduate studies, up to 4
points of independent study, workstudy in Germany, or internship
work may also be counted toward
the major.
With permission of the director of
undergraduate studies, students may
choose to incorporate a concentration
in history, politics, economics, international studies, or another discipline
into the German major. To this end,
up to three courses from the department’s offerings at the 200 level or
from offerings of other departments
may be counted toward the major in
German. These three courses must
represent a coherent concentration
and must be approved by the student’s departmental adviser.
All majors must have their academic programs approved by the director of undergraduate studies or by a
designated departmental adviser.
Students majoring in German are
strongly encouraged to fulfill some of
the program requirements through a
semester of study abroad at one of
NYU’s partner institutions in Bonn,
Berlin, or Vienna.
Joint Major in German and
Linguistics: For requirements, see
description in the Department of Linguistics (61) section.
MINOR PROGRAMS
Students may choose one of three
programs of study. All minor programs must have the approval of the
department.
German: 20 points of course
work in German, including at least
two courses at the 100 level or
above. Courses taught in English,
tutorials, and independent study do
not count for the minor.
German Literature in Translation: Any four courses in German
literature in translation offered by
the department, selected in consultation with a departmental adviser
(usually from the department’s offerings at the 200 level). Not open to
majors in German language and literature or German studies.
Literature in Translation:
Courses offered by the department at
the 200 level may be used in partial
fulfillment of the requirements for
this minor; see the program description in the Literature in Translation
section of this bulletin.
COMBINED B.A./M.A.
PROGRAM IN GERMANIC
LANGUAGES AND
LITERATURES
The B.A./M.A. program in German
is designed to prepare undergraduate
students for career choices requiring
advanced knowledge of German language, literature, and culture;
sophisticated understanding of the
German intellectual and critical traditions; or training in foreign language methodology. The four-year
undergraduate component of the
program includes one semester of
study abroad and leads to the B.A.
degree. Students in this portion of
the program develop their language
skills and cultural awareness and
examine significant works and
authors of German literature. The
one-year graduate component of the
program consists of three possible
tracks: literary studies; German studies; German language pedagogy.
Eligibility: Students must have
completed 48 credits of undergraduate work, with at least 16 of these
credits completed at NYU, and have
been approved by the director of
undergraduate studies for application
to the combined degree program.
Students must also meet the following minimum requirements for
admission to the program:
1. Primary major in German;
2. GPA of at least 3.5 overall and
at least 3.6 in German;
3. Satisfactory completion at
NYU, by the start of the first semester in the program, of at least two 4point courses in German at the
advanced level; and
4. Evidence of overall language
competency in German sufficient for
successful advanced undergraduate
and graduate study.
Degree Requirements:
Required Courses. All students in the
combined degree program are
required to complete one of the following graduate courses in either the
senior (4th) or graduate (5th) year of
study: Theories of Literary Interpretation (literary studies track); Methods of Teaching (pedagogy track); or
Aspects of German Culture (German
studies track).
1. Study Abroad. Undergraduates
accepted into the program are
required to spend at least one semester studying abroad in one of the
NYU exchange programs in a German-speaking country. The study
abroad requirement may be waived
by the department in consideration
of special circumstances. Summer
study in an approved program may
be used to satisfy the study abroad
requirement.
2. Master’s Thesis or Examination. Students are required at the end
of the fifth year of the program
either to submit a Master’s Thesis,
which should represent the culmination of a longer-term research effort,
or to take an oral Master’s Examination with three members of the
department’s faculty.
GENERAL INFORMATION
Program Approval and Advising:
Students who wish to major or
minor in German must register with
the department and have their programs approved by the director of
undergraduate studies or the director
of language programs. Majors and
minors will be assigned a departmental adviser, with whom they
should consult before registering
each semester.
Study Abroad: Students pursuing the major in German are
encouraged to complete some of the
requirements by spending a semester
abroad at one of the NYU exchange
sites in Berlin (FU and Humboldt),
Bonn, or Vienna. NYU financial aid
can be applied to the costs of living
and studying at any of these exchange
institutions, and NYU academic
credit is awarded directly for courses
taken. Students may study abroad for
one semester or a full year, usually in
the junior year, with the approval of
the major department(s) and the
assistant dean for international study.
The minimum requirement for any
of the exchange programs is successful completion of 64 points of undergraduate course work. Both proGERMAN
•
145
Courses
grams in Berlin require proficiency
in German; the programs in Bonn
and Vienna offer some courses in
English.
NYU in Berlin in cooperation
with Duke University: This is an
academic program intended primarily for undergraduates studying in
Germany for the first time. The program helps students advance their
language skills and deepen their
understanding of German culture,
society, and politics. Students attend
NYU courses taught by German faculty and by the program’s resident
director.
Students participating in the program take a full NYU course load
and can earn up to 18 points of credit. The program offers language and
culture courses taught in German as
well as art history, architecture, and
economics classes that begin in
English and segue into German. Students may also pursue independent
research projects for credit. The
program is open to a very limited
number of students.
NYU in Berlin (Summer Program): The department offers a sixweek summer program in Berlin.
The program consists of language
courses and culture courses (in English), which may be applied to the
major or minor.
Goethe Institute: The department provides a program of summer
study in Germany under the auspices
of the Goethe Institute for students
who wish to accelerate their language
training. Summer programs last from
four to eight weeks; up to 8 points of
credit may be applied to the major or
minor, with the prior approval of the
director of undergraduate studies.
Deutsches Haus at NYU:
Located directly across the street
from the department at 42 Washington Mews, Deutsches Haus provides
a broad program of cultural and
intellectual enrichment for students
of German through lectures, concerts, films, exhibitions, and readings. Deutsches Haus offers students
many opportunities to meet, practice
their German, and learn from prominent artistic, literary, business, and
political figures of German-speaking
countries.
German Club: This student-run
group is open to interested undergraduates at all levels of German language ability. The German Club
sponsors several activities each
month during the academic year,
including conversation hours, films,
restaurant visits, and parties.
Delta Phi Alpha: Membership
in the national German honor society
is open to undergraduate students of
German who have at minimum a
general average of 3.0 and an average
of 3.5 in advanced-level courses
taught in German. The society sponsors occasional events and an annual
award for excellence in the study of
German. NYU’s Tau chapter, founded in 1932, is among the oldest in
the country.
Departmental Awards: The
Department of German sponsors a
series of annual awards in recognition
of excellence and achievement in the
study of German—the Auguste
Ulfers Memorial Prize, the Delta Phi
Alpha Prize, the Donald Parker
Prize, and the Ernst Rose-G. C. L.
Schuchard Anniversary Prize. For
further information, see the Honors
and Awards section of this bulletin.
Placement: All students with previous study of German should take a
placement examination before registering for their first courses in those
languages; see under “Placement
Examinations” in the Academic Policies section of this bulletin. The
departmental placement process consists of a consultation with the director of language programs to choose
the level of language instruction
most appropriate to the individual
student’s needs and abilities.
Language Requirement: The
department offers courses allowing
students to complete the College of
Arts and Science language requirement in German. Students may
choose either the extensive sequence
of four 4-point courses or the inten-
sive sequence of two 6-point courses.
Students planning to major in German are advised to follow the intensive sequence.
EXTENSIVE SEQUENCE
146
•
GERMAN
BASIC LANGUAGE COURSES
IN GERMAN
All German language courses use
communicative methodology. Elementary level courses introduce students to essential linguistic and
social conventions of contemporary
spoken German, with an emphasis
on establishing conversational skills.
Intermediate level courses introduce
more complex features of the language and focus on building reading
and writing skills while continuing
to develop conversational ability.
HONORS PROGRAM
Eligibility: The departmental Honors Program is open to students
majoring in either German language
and literature or German studies.
Students are admitted to the program on the basis of superior work
after at least two semesters of study
in German at the advanced level.
The minimum eligibility requirements for the Honors Program are an
overall grade point average of 3.5
and an average of 3.5 in the major.
Each student in the Honors Program
should select an honors adviser from
among the undergraduate teaching
faculty of the department.
Requirements for Honors in
German: Students must register for
V51.0500, Honors Thesis, or
V51.0501, Honors Seminar, and
work under the guidance of a faculty
member to produce a research paper,
in German, at least 15-20 pages in
length.
Elementary German I
V51.0001 Open only to students with
no previous training in German; others
require department permission. 4 points.
Elementary German II
V51.0002 Continuation of V51.0001.
Prerequisite: V51.0001 or assignment by
placement examination or department permission. 4 points.
Intermediate German I
V51.0003 Prerequisite: V51.0002 or
V51.0010 or assignment by placement
examination or department permission.
4 points.
Intermediate German II
V51.0004 Continuation of V51.0003.
Prerequisite: V51.0003 or assignment by
placement examination or department permission. 4 points.
INTENSIVE SEQUENCE
Intensive Elementary German
V51.0010 Open to students with no
previous training in German and to others on assignment by placement examination or with department permission.
6 points.
Intensive course that completes the
equivalent of a year’s elementary
work (V51.0001 and V51.0002) in
one semester. Emphasizes spoken and
written communication skills. Introduces students to the basic conventions, idioms, and structures of
contemporary spoken German.
Intensive Intermediate German
V51.0020 Prerequisite: V51.0010 or
assignment by placement examination or
department permission. 6 points.
Intensive course that completes the
equivalent of a year’s intermediate
work (V51.0003 and V51.0004) in
one semester. Continuing emphasis
on developing spoken and written
communication skills. Students learn
more advanced features of the language and begin to read longer and
more complex texts.
INDIVIDUALIZED-STUDY
PROGRAM
The Department of German offers an
extensive program of individualized
study in which students work oneon-one with a faculty member or an
advanced graduate assistant on a
topic of the individual student’s
choosing. Credit options and weekly
meeting times are flexible. Students
normally enroll for 2 points per term
to supplement other course work in
German or Swedish. Points accumulated in individualized study may
not be applied to the major or minor
in German.
Elementary Tutorial
V51.0011, 0012 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2-4 points per
term.
Intermediate Tutorial
V51.0021, 0022 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2-4 points per
term.
Advanced Tutorial
V51.0091, 0092 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2-4 points per
term. May be repeated for credit.
LANGUAGE INSTRUCTION
FOR RESEARCH PURPOSES
The department offers a two-course
sequence for those, including graduate and professional students, who
need to use German primarily for
reading rather than for spoken communication. These noncredit courses,
conducted in English, are usually
offered in the summer. The two reading and research courses may be
taken independently of each other.
German for Reading and
Research I
V51.0097 No previous knowledge of
German required. May be repeated.
0 points.
Intensive reading-skills course for
graduate students, professionals, and
others who want to use the language
primarily for reading and research
purposes. Emphasis is on grammatical
forms, sentence and paragraph structures, and styles of written discourse.
Regular practice with expository texts
of increasing length and difficulty
teaches students to identify main
ideas and find specific information.
German for Reading and
Research II
V51.0098 Continuation of V51.0097.
Recommended prerequisite: V51.0097 or
equivalent training in German. May be
repeated. 0 points.
Readings of complex texts from a
variety of historical periods and disciplines, with emphasis on identifying tone and purpose, textual and
subtextual details.
ing skills and their integration with
speaking skills. All courses at this
level are conducted in German.
Prerequisites: All German
courses at the 100 level require successful completion of V51.0004 or
V51.0020 or department permission.
German Conversation and
Composition
V51.0111 Formerly V51.0025, German Conversation. 4 points.
Aims to improve students’ proficiency in writing and speaking German
in three functional areas: description,
narration, and argumentation. Grammar and vocabulary are reviewed and
practiced as appropriate. Students
examine and discuss texts of various
genres and then draft and present
work of their own in each genre.
Discussion and writing components
are closely coordinated. Activities
include presentations, peer review,
guided writing, and editing.
Advanced Composition and
Grammar
V51.0114 4 points.
Improves students’ proficiency in
writing German at an advanced level.
Students develop skills in the functional areas of analysis, interpretation,
and argumentation. The composition
endeavor is constructed as a process of
drafting, peer review, guided editing,
and redrafting. Includes a systematic
review of advanced grammar, idioms,
and structures necessary for the effective written expression of abstract
concepts.
POSTINTERMEDIATE
COURSES IN LANGUAGE,
CULTURE, AND LITERATURE
(100 LEVEL)
German for Business
V51.0124 4 points.
Familiarizes students with the conventions and specialized language of
business and commerce in the German-speaking countries. Emphasizes
development of oral and written
communication skills in business
contexts and awareness of appropriate social behaviors.
These are “bridge” courses between
basic language study and more
advanced courses. The common goal
of courses at this level is to consolidate students’ command of spoken
and written German, to review
advanced structures of the language,
and to provide core information that
will be needed in advanced study of
literature and culture. Particular
emphasis is placed on the development of complex reading and writ-
Germany: 1989 and Beyond
V51.0132 4 points.
Investigates cultural and political
issues that have arisen in post-unification Germany. Aims to equip students with the knowledge, language
tools, and comprehension strategies
they need to understand and respond
to German-language discussions of
contemporary events. Focuses on
issues of German identity/anxiety
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such as foreigners in Germany, “East”
versus “West” Germans, and the role
of Germany in Europe. Various genres are explored, including fiction,
essays, newspaper articles, Internet
publications, and satellite news
broadcasts from Berlin.
German Culture 1890-1989
V51.0133 Formerly V51.0028, Topics
in German Culture. 4 points.
Overview of modern and postmodern
culture in the German-speaking countries from 1890 to 1989. From the fin
de siècle through Weimar Germany,
fascism/exile, and the postwar era to
the fall of the Wall, the course traverses the heights and depths of German
cultural topography.
German Civilization to 1890
V51.0143 4 points.
What does “German” mean? Using
maps, texts, and pictorial documents,
this course introduces students to
various ways of thinking about “German” language, culture, history, and
nation. Our overview includes a brief
sketch of the Germanic tribes and
mythology and Germany in the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Reformation,
and modern period to 1890. Contemporary critical issues are introduced, including the relationship
between Germans and “non-Germans” as well as notions of boundaries and their transgression.
Introduction to German
Literature
V51.0152 4 points.
Introduction to representative
authors and works of German literature, with emphasis on the modern
period. Students learn basic conventions of literature and literary interpretation, as well as strategies for the
effective reading of shorter and
longer prose works, drama, and poetry. Guided writing assignments focus
on developing the language skills
necessary for effective written analysis and interpretation of literary texts
in German.
ADVANCED LITERATURE
AND CULTURE COURSES
CONDUCTED IN ENGLISH
(200 LEVEL)
Courses at the 200 level are conducted in English. Literature-oriented
courses at this level may count in fulfillment of the minor in German literature in translation. Many of these
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courses are cross-listed with other
NYU departments or programs. No
knowledge of German is required for
courses at this level.
Prerequisites: None.
Benn, Kafka, Hesse, Mann); filmmakers (Wiene, Murnau, Lang,
Dido, Papst); and painters (Kirchner,
Marc, Macke, Nolde, Klee, Kokoschka, Kandinsky, Grosz, Feininger).
The German Intellectual
Tradition
V51.0244 4 points.
Designed to familiarize students
with the major currents of German
intellectual and literary history. The
course is organized thematically, conceptually, or according to the trajectories associated with crucial
thinkers. Special emphasis is placed
on the impact those thinkers have
had on literary and aesthetic phenomena. Readings from Lessing,
Kant, Schiller, Goethe, Freud, Nietzsche, Gadamer, Arendt, Heidegger.
Modernism
V51.0265 Identical to V29.0421.
4 points.
Focuses on the emergence of mass
culture and shows how the modernist
and avant-garde movements question
the very institution of art in work.
Materials include works of literature,
theory, film, and the visual arts.
Introduction to Theory
V51.0249 4 points.
Focuses on crucial theoretical developments in German literary and
philosophical discourses. Introduces
students to contemporary theoretical
issues at the forefront of academic
debate and seeks to give students a
sense of ground and foundation in
terms of the origins of current discussions. The course includes considerations of literary phenomena, critical legal studies, feminist and deconstructive theories, the Frankfurt
School, and psychoanalysis.
Topics in German Cinema
V51.0253 Identical to V30.0507.
4 points.
Introduces special topics in acquainting students with significant contributions emerging from the German
cinematic tradition. Selections are
studied generically, thematically, or
by historical period. Emphasis is also
placed upon issues of film analysis
and theory. Possible course topics are
new German cinema, film and feminism, early German film, and film
and nationalism.
Expressionism and Modernity in
Literature and in the Arts
V51.0255 4 points.
Discussion of German contributions
to literature and the arts in a European context during the first half of
the 20th century. Course examines
Weimar culture, expressionism, new
objectivity, political repression, and
the contemporary scene. The era is
characterized by the works of important writers (Wedekind, Brecht,
Representations of the Holocaust
V51.0275 4 points.
Examines the possibilities in literature, historiography, film, and other
forms of testimony bearing witness
to the Holocaust as the event that
calls into question basic assumptions
about European intellectual traditions. Topics include the limits of
representation; the aestheticization of
violence; the difference between
event and experience; the question of
survival; the problem of testimony;
the individual, institutional, and historical dimensions of justice, memory, and forgetting. Materials include
literary, theoretical, and documentary
readings; and film and video viewings.
Madness and Genius
V51.0285 4 points.
Explores the relationship among talent, inspiration, and psychological
instability in works of the 19th and
20th centuries. Considers the link
between inspiration and possession;
Western culture’s valorization of
originality; the political purpose of
characterizing originality as psychologically transgressive; and the allegorization of the creative process
through depictions of madness.
Law and Literature
V51.0295 Identical to V45.0290 and
V29.0290. 4 points.
Explores the relationship of literature
to law in significant literary works
whose principal themes involve legal
and transcendental confrontations.
Readings include works by Mary
Shelley, Freud, Kafka, Sacher-Masoch,
and Derrida.
Topics in 19th-Century Literature
V51.0297 Identical to V29.0180.
4 points.
Topics in 20th-Century Literature
V51.0298 4 points.
ADVANCED LITERATURE
AND CULTURE COURSES
CONDUCTED IN GERMAN
(300 LEVEL)
Courses at this level provide a broad
historical overview of specific periods
in German literary and cultural
development. Advanced German language skills are practiced, with particular emphasis on the ability to
summarize and on the expression of
supported opinion. Students read
more texts of greater linguistic and
conceptual complexity than those
used at the 100 level, although readings consist primarily of short works
and excerpts. Readings are drawn
from literary and nonliterary sources.
Prerequisites: It is recommended that students complete V51.0152
or the equivalent before enrolling in
courses at the 300 level.
Romanticism
V51.0349 4 points.
Traces the development of romanticism in Germany in the period 17891830. Examines the philosophy of
idealism and its aesthetic effect on
the various phases of the romantic
movements. Considers the Jena, Heidelberg, and Berlin schools in light of
their works and their artistic and
sociopolitical theories. Representative
writings include poetry, novellas,
fairy tales, and essays.
German Literature of the 19th
Century
V51.0355 4 points.
Study of German prose and drama
from the end of romanticism to the
development of expressionism before
the turn of the century. Selected texts
deal with poetic realism, the rise of
new literary forms leading to naturalism, and Austrian and German
manifestations of impressionism and
expressionism.
20th-Century German Prose
V51.0366 4 points.
Investigates significant prose texts of
German-language authors from 1900
to the present. Genres discussed
include the short story, the novella,
and the novel.
Post-1945 German Literature
V51.0369 4 points.
Examines works by some of the
major German-language writers in
the decades following World War II.
Concerned with the historical and
intellectual background of the period
and the confrontation with both the
past and the future in representative
works.
Modern German Drama
V51.0377 4 points.
Development of German-language
drama from the early plays of Brecht.
Concerns include political motivations of dramatic development; problems in writing 20th-century tragedy;
meaning of the grotesque and the
absurd; neonaturalist elements.
German Poetry
V51.0385 4 points.
Survey of significant authors and
developments in German poetry,
with emphasis on the 19th and 20th
centuries. Traces basic themes; examines narrative, dramatic, and lyric
structures in poetry.
ADVANCED SEMINARS
CONDUCTED IN GERMAN
(400 LEVEL)
These courses examine authors,
groups of works, and intellectual,
aesthetic, and social movements of
particular significance in the development of German literature and
culture. These courses have a narrower focus than do those at the 300
level; the emphasis is on in-depth
examination rather than on overview.
Readings are longer and more linguistically demanding than those
used at the previous level. Language
work focuses on conjecture and the
expression of abstract concepts, both
in written and in spoken German.
Goethe
V51.0455 4 points.
Examines Goethe as the pivotal literary figure of his time. Considers
Goethe’s prose, poetry, and drama
from the late Enlightenment
through storm and stress to classicism and beyond.
The Age of Goethe
V51.0456 4 points.
Examines German reaction to the
Enlightenment in the literature of
storm and stress and of classicism.
Considers irrationalism, social
protest, and Humanitätsdichtung as
successive stages of the expansion of
consciousness in an age in which
Goethe was the central, but not the
only significant, literary figure.
Readings include Herder, Von der
Urpoesie der Völker and selected
poems; Lenz, Die Soldaten; Schiller,
Die Räuber, Kabale und Liebe, Maria
Stuart, and selected poems; Hölderlin, selected poems.
Faust
V51.0457 4 points.
Examines the figure of Faust in legend and literature, beginning with
its first appearance in the 16th century. Discussion of the influence of
Faust in German and other European
literary traditions. Readings include
excerpts from the 1587 Historia von
D. Johann Fausten; Goethe’s Urfaust
and excerpts from his later dramatic
versions (Faust, Ein Fragment; Faust I
and II); and Thomas Mann’s Doktor
Faustus.
Literature of the Weimar Period
V51.0468 4 points.
The chaotic Weimar period (19181933) began with a revolution and
ended with the takeover by the
Nazis. During these few years, German modernism evolved from
expressionism to the aesthetics of
New Sobriety (“Neue Sachlichkeit”).
From the more traditional (Thomas
Mann, Hermann Hesse) to the experimental and revolutionary (Bertolt
Brecht, Anna Seghers), the works of
this period draw into question its
subsequent glorification as the
“golden ’20s.” Readings include
works by Brecht, Hesse, Roth,
Seghers, Klaus Mann, and Thomas
Mann.
Minority Discourses
V51.0475 4 points.
In recent years, literary productions
have emerged that fall under the
heading of “minority” literatures,
often understood as texts written in
German by so-called foreigners. The
course examines this notion critically
and also analyzes the impact of individual works in relation to current
debates on multiculturalism, integration, and national identity.
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Seminar on 19th-Century
Authors
V51.0487 4 points.
Seminar on 20th-Century
Authors
V51.0488 4 points.
Each of these courses provides
advanced students of German with
an in-depth knowledge of one major
author of either the 19th or 20th
century. Works of the chosen author
are examined in terms of how he or
she contributes to, and possibly challenges, prevailing aesthetic, political,
and cultural trends of his or her
time.
HONORS AND
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Honors Thesis
V51.0500 Prerequisite: permission of
the department. 2 or 4 points.
Honors Seminar
V51.0501 Prerequisite: permission of
the department. 4 points.
Advanced seminar for honors students. See description of “Honors
Program,” above.
Internship
V51.0977, 0978 Formerly
V51.0980, 0981. Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
Work-Study in Germany
V51.0985 Formerly V51.0400. Prerequisite: permission of the department.
2-6 points.
Consult the director of undergraduate studies for information.
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GERMAN
Independent Study
V51.0990 Prerequisite: permission of
the department. May be repeated for credit. 2-4 points.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Graduate courses offered by the
department are open to seniors with
the permission of the director of
undergraduate studies. A student
wishing to take a graduate course
conducted in German must be able
to demonstrate sufficiently advanced
German language ability.
S K I R B A L L D E PA RT M E N T O F
Hebrew and Judaic Studies (78)
5 1 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E S O U T H , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 1 2 - 1 0 7 5 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 9 8 0 .
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Schiffman
DIRECTOR OF
U N D ER G R A D U AT E
STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Rubenstein
COORDINATOR OF
HEBREW LANGUAGE
P RO G R A M:
Dr. Kamelhar
Faculty
T
he Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies seeks to present an integrated program in Hebrew language and literature as well as a full range of offerings in
Jewish history, literature, and thought. Students may major or minor in Hebrew
language and literature or in Jewish history and civilization. Qualified students are encouraged to enroll in appropriate graduate courses. Students from other departments have the
opportunity to broaden their knowledge and understanding of major events and ideas that
shaped the development of Jewish civilization and culture. Courses are taught by a diverse
faculty whose fields include biblical studies; postbiblical and Talmudic literature; medieval
and modern Hebrew literature; history of the Jews in the ancient, medieval, and modern
periods; Jewish philosophy; Jewish mysticism; and related fields. The Dorot Teaching Fellowship program brings scholars of Judaic studies in various fields to NYU to enrich the
undergraduate offerings.
The Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies sponsors a wide range of
conferences, lectures, and colloquia that allow students exposure to current research and
thought in the various areas of Jewish civilization. In addition, the department collaborates
closely with the Departments of History, English, Classics, Comparative Literature, and
Middle Eastern Studies; the Kevorkian Center for Near Eastern Studies; the Program in
Religious Studies; and other appropriate departments. The department is further enriched
by the extensive holdings of Judaica and Hebraica in the New York University Bobst
Library and by cooperative arrangements with Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of
Religion. In addition, New York City offers students a wide range of resources, both academic and cultural. Students are also encouraged to study in Israel to broaden their
knowledge of Hebrew and Judaic studies.
Professors Emeriti:
Gordon, Levine, Winter
Ethel and Irvin A. Edelman
Professor of Hebraic and
Judaic Studies:
Schiffman
S. H. and Helen R. Scheuer
Professor of Hebrew and
Judaic Studies:
Chazan
Abraham I. Katsh Professor of
Hebrew Culture and Education:
Feldman
Maurice Greenberg Professor of
Holocaust Studies:
Engel
Skirball Professor of Jewish
Thought:
Ivry
Paul and Sylvia Steinberg Professor of American Jewish Studies:
Diner
Skirball Professor of Bible and
Near Eastern Studies:
Smith
Skirball Professor of Modern
Jewish History
Kaplan
H E B R E W
A N D
J U D A I C
S T U D I E S
•
1 5 1
Program
Judge Abraham Leiberman
Professor of Hebrew and
Judaic Studies:
Wolfson
Professors:
Kirshenblatt-Gimblett, Peters
Senior Language Lecturer:
Kamelhar
Associate Professors:
Fleming, Rubenstein
Language Lecturer:
Merdinger
MAJORS
major. Students are required to complete at least one course in each of
the chronological periods.
Requirements:
1. Completion of the major
requirements.
2. At least two graduate level
courses selected from among those
approved by the department and
completed with a grade point average of 3.5. These courses may be
used toward the requirements for the
major.
3. An honors thesis researched
and written while registered in Independent Study, V78.0997 or
V78.0998, under the supervision of a
department faculty member. Honors
research may not be included in the
courses required to fulfill the major.
The subject of the honors thesis and
the faculty adviser are chosen in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies. The average length
of the paper is 25 to 50 doublespaced, typed pages. For general
requirements, please see under Honors
and Awards.
Major in Hebrew language and
literature: The major in Hebrew
language and literature allows students to concentrate on any of the
following areas: biblical studies, classical Jewish texts, medieval and
modern Hebrew literature, or a combination of these areas. Students
must complete nine courses. At least
seven of the nine courses must deal
with Hebrew texts.
Major in Jewish history and
civilization: The major in Jewish
history and civilization allows students to concentrate on the history,
culture, and civilization of the Jewish
people in various periods (ancient,
medieval, and modern) or in a combination of these periods. Students
must complete nine courses and
attain Hebrew proficiency of at least
the level of Intermediate Hebrew II,
V78.0004. Hebrew language and literature courses may count toward the
Courses
Placement in Hebrew language
courses: The placement of students
in Hebrew language courses is
explained under “Placement Examinations” in the Academic Policies section of this bulletin.
Morse Academic Plan (MAP)
language requirement: The language requirement in Hebrew may
be fulfilled either by an extensive
sequence of four 4-point courses
(V78.0001, V78.0002, V78.0003,
and V78.0004), for a total of 16
points, or by an intensive sequence of
one 6-point course (V78.0005) and
two 4-point courses, for a total of
14 points.
INTRODUCTORY LANGUAGE
COURSES
Elementary Hebrew I
V78.0001 Identical to V77.0301.
Open to students with no previous training in Hebrew and to others by placement
examination or in consultation with the
coordinator of the Hebrew language program. 4 points.
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HEBREW
AND
MINORS
Minor in Hebrew language and
literature: At least four courses in
Hebrew language and literature
beyond the level of Elementary
Hebrew II, V78.0002.
Minor in Jewish history and
civilization: At least four courses in
Jewish history and civilization, two
of which may be on the introductory
level.
HONORS PROGRAM
Eligibility: At least two full years in
residence at New York University
and 64 points of graded work, while
maintaining a general grade point
average of 3.5 and a major average of
3.5.
Active introduction to modern
Hebrew as it is spoken and written
in Israel today. Presents the essentials
of Hebrew grammar, combining the
oral-aural approach with formal
grammatical concepts. Reinforces
learning by reading of graded texts.
Emphasizes the acquisition of an
idiomatic conversational vocabulary
and language patterns.
Elementary Hebrew II
V78.0002 Identical to V77.0302.
Continuation of V78.0001. Open to students who have completed V78.0001 and
to others by placement examination.
4 points.
For description, see Elementary
Hebrew I, V78.0001.
Intermediate Hebrew I
V78.0003 Identical to V77.0303.
Prerequisite: V78.0001-0002 or
V78.0005. Open to students who have
completed the equivalent of a year’s elementary-level Hebrew and to others on
assignment by placement examination.
4 points.
JUDAIC
STUDIES
Builds on skills acquired in Elementary Hebrew I and II and develops a
deepening command of all linguistic
skills. Modern literary and expository
texts are read to expand vocabulary
and grammatical knowledge, with
conversation and composition exercises built around the texts. Introduces selections from Israeli media.
Addresses the relationship between
classical and modern Hebrew.
Intermediate Hebrew II
V78.0004 Identical to V77.0304.
Continuation of V78.0003. Open to students who have completed V78.0003 and
to others by placement examination. The
sequence of V78.0003, 0004 is equivalent to V78.0006. 4 points.
For description, see Intermediate
Hebrew I, V78.0003.
Intensive Elementary Hebrew
V78.0005 Identical to V77.0311.
Open to students with no previous training in Hebrew and to others by placement
examination or in consultation with the
coordinator of the Hebrew language pro-
gram. Meets four days a week for 95
minutes per day. Completes the equivalent
of a year’s elementary level Hebrew in one
semester. 6 points.
For description, see Elementary
Hebrew I, II, V78.0001, 0002.
ADVANCED MODERN
HEBREW LANGUAGE
COURSES
Prerequisite for all advanced language courses is V78.0004 or the
equivalent.
Advanced Hebrew: Conversation
and Composition
V78.0011 4 points.
Aimed at training the student in
exact and idiomatic Hebrew usage
and at acquiring facility of expression
in both conversation and writing.
Reading and discussion of selections
from Hebrew prose, poetry, and current periodical literature.
Advanced Hebrew: Structure of
Modern Hebrew Grammar
V78.0012 4 points.
Designed to provide a thorough
grounding in Hebrew grammar with
special emphasis on phonology, morphology, and syntax. Concentrated
study of vocalization, accentuation,
declensions, conjugations, and classification of verbs.
Advanced Hebrew: Writing and
Reading Contemporary Hebrew
V78.0013 4 points.
Reading and discussion of modern
literary and expository works. Focuses on the many stylistic registers that
modern Hebrew has developed.
Intended to train students in fluent
expository writing and advanced
reading comprehension, concentrating on Hebrew idiom and vocabulary
emphasizing literary form and style
of composition.
Hebrew of the Israeli
Communications Media
V78.0073 4 points.
Extensive selections from a representative range of Israeli media, including newspapers, magazines, and
broadcasting. Stresses study of various approaches in the different media
as well as practical exercises in comprehending Israeli press styles.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
The following graduate courses are
open to qualified students. Before
registering for these courses, the student must obtain permission from
the coordinator of the Hebrew language program.
Academic Hebrew I, II
G78.1318, 1319 Kamelhar. 3 points
each.
Trains students to conduct research
in Hebrew using primary source
materials of various periods as well as
contemporary journals and scholarly
works. Focuses on grammatical and
stylistic problems, with special
attention to developing accuracy and
fluency of usage in the written text.
HEBREW LITERATURE
CLASSICAL HEBREW TEXTS
COURSES CONDUCTED IN
ENGLISH USING HEBREW
TEXTS
Self and Other in Israeli Short
Story
V78.0078 Feldman. 4 points.
The development in the perception
of the “Other” from 1948 to 1978 in
ideologically engaged literature.
Advanced Readings in Modern
Hebrew Literature
V78.0782 Prerequisite: V78.0075 or
equivalent. Feldman. 4 points.
In-depth study of selected masterpieces by 20th-century Hebrew
writers. Appreciation of artistic
achievements against the sociohistorical background and general cultural
currents of the period. Selections
include fiction, poetry, and literary
criticism by and about several of the
following writers: Agnon, Brenner,
Gnessin, Yizhar, Alterman, Bialik,
and Greenberg.
Literature of the Holocaust
V78.0690 Prerequisite: V78.0004 or
equivalent. Feldman. 4 points.
Examines representations of the
Holocaust in Hebrew fiction and
poetry. Among issues to be explored
is the difference between the
responses of the Jewish community
in Palestine at the time and later
reconstruction by survivors and witnesses; and the new perspectives
added since the 1980s by “the second generation,” the children of survivors who made this theme a central
H E B R E W
A N D
topic in contemporary Israeli culture.
Hebrew required. Texts by Appelfeld,
Shlonski, Greenberg, Gilbo’a,
Liebrecht, Semel, Grossman, and
Almog.
Israeli Women Writers—the
“Second Wave”
V78.0783 Identical to V97.0783.
Prerequisite: V78.0004 or equivalent.
Feldman. 4 points.
What made possible the contemporary “boom” in Israeli women’s fiction, propelling women—for the
first time ever—to the top of Israel’s
best-seller list (1997)? This course
explores the place of national ideologies in Israeli culture and their
conflict with feminist aspirations.
Readings for this course include
writings by Israeli women, with special emphasis on the literature of the
“second wave” (1980s-1990s).
MODERN HEBREW
LITERATURE COURSES IN
TRANSLATION CONDUCTED
IN ENGLISH USING
ENGLISH TEXTS
From Hebrew to Israeli
Literature in Translation
V78.0076 Identical to V77.0713.
Feldman. 4 points.
Comprehensive introduction to representative works of modern Hebrew
literature from the writers of the
National Hebrew Renaissance of the
late 19th century to the present.
Focuses on thematic and structural
analysis of texts in light of social and
intellectual movements of the period.
Readings include the writings of
Peretz, Berdichevsky, Ahad Ha’am,
Gnessin, Brenner, Agnon, Hazaz,
Yehoshua, and Appelfeld.
Israel: Fact Through Fiction
V78.0780 Identical to V77.0698.
Feldman. 4 points.
The clashes between ideology and
reality. Eastern and Western cultures
and the human impact of different
sociopolitical structures in Israel considered primarily through translations of the works of Yizhar,
Yehoshua, Kahana-Carmon, Hareven,
Oz, Amichai, Avidan, and Almog.
J U D A I C
S T U D I E S
•
1 5 3
JEWISH HISTORY AND
CIVILIZATION
History of Judaism I
V78.0100 Identical to V77.0680 and
V90.0680. Rubenstein, Schiffman.
4 points.
History of Judaism during its formative periods. Hellenistic Judaism,
Jewish sectarianism, and the ultimate emergence of the rabbinic system of religion and law.
Modern Jewish History
V78.0103 Identical to V57.0099.
Engel. 4 points.
Major movements in the culture and
civilization of the Jewish people from
the Renaissance to the Holocaust in
Europe. Major topics include Jewish
life in Eastern Europe, Western
Europe, and America; Zionism; and
the Holocaust.
The Jews in Medieval Spain
V78.0113 Identical to V57.0549,
V65.0913. Robinson. 4 points.
The seven centuries from the Muslim
conquest of Spain in the eighth century to the expulsion of the Jews in
1492 saw the greatest levels of
mutual toleration and coexistence
among Jews, Christians, and Muslims achieved at any time during the
Middle Ages. This course uses contemporary sources, from philosophical treatises to religious polemics to
erotic love poetry, to introduce the
history of this important Jewish
community and its relationship to
the Muslim and Christian societies
that surrounded it, including economic, cultural, and religious interactions, mutual influence, and violent conflict.
Jews in the Islamic World in the
Modern Period
V78.0114 Identical to V77.0616,
V90.0610, V57.0521. Franklin.
4 points.
This course presents a broad, chronologically organized survey of the history of the Jewish communities in
the Middle East from the rise of the
Ottoman Empire to the end of the
20th century. Topics covered include
the organization and functioning of
the Jewish communities; the interaction between Jews and Muslims; the
effects of the twin processes of modernization and Westernization on
these communities; and the relocation of the vast majority of Middle
154
•
HEBREW
AND
Eastern Jewry to the State of Israel in
the 20th century. The course concludes with a brief look at the Jewish
communities that continue to live in
the Middle East.
Ancient Israel
V78.0118 Fleming, Smith. 4 points.
History of the Israelite people in
ancient times, based on literary and
archaeological existence, and the
important contribution of the study
of the ancient Near East to biblical
studies.
Biblical Archaeology
V78.0120 Identical to V90.0120.
Fleming. Smith. 4 points.
An examination of the methods and
conclusions of archaeological research
and excavation as applied to the
Bible and the history of Israel in
antiquity. Topics to be discussed
include historicity of the exodus and
Israelite conquest of Canaan, empires
of David and Solomon, and the
nature of Israelite religion. The class
investigates how archaeology provides evidence for evaluating the biblical text and reconstructing early
Israelite history. The course concentrates on the period from the exodus
and conquest of the land through the
Babylonian exile.
Ancient Near Eastern Mythology
V78.0125 Identical to V77.0607.
Fleming. 4 points.
The myths of the ancient Near East
represent the earliest literary expressions of human thought. Students in
this class read myths from ancient
Egypt, Mesopotamia, Ugarit, Anatolia, and Israel, studying the myths
themselves as literary works as well
as exploring the ideas and broader
issues that shaped them. These
myths, including both extensive literary masterpieces such as The Epic of
Gilgamesh and shorter works such as
The Flight of Etana to Heaven, offer a
window into the religious mentality
of the ancient Near East, which in
turn laid the foundation for many
elements of our own modern Western culture.
Modern Perspectives on the Bible
V78.0126 Identical to V77.0809,
V90.0809. Fleming, Smith. 4 points.
Introduces the student to modern
study of the Bible from historical,
literary, and archaeological points of
view. Reading and analysis of texts in
translation.
JUDAIC
STUDIES
The Dead Sea Scrolls
V78.0131 Identical to V90.0807.
Schiffman. 4 points.
Survey of the importance of the Dead
Sea Scrolls for the history of early
Judaism and Christianity. Reading
and discussion of English translations
of the major texts.
The Land of Israel Through
the Ages
V78.0141 Identical to V77.0609,
V57.0540, and V90.0609. Schiffman.
4 points.
Surveys the history of the land of
Israel with special attention to its
inhabitants and other various cultures from prehistoric times to the
modern state. Archaeological evidence receives thorough attention.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
V78.0160 Identical to V65.0025,
V77.0800, and V90.0102. Peters.
4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Foundations of the ChristianJewish Argument
V78.0161 Identical to V65.0160,
V90.0192. Chazan. 4 points.
The relationship between Jews and
Christians in the Middle Ages was a
complex and often stormy one, in
which theological, economic, social,
and political factors were interwoven.
This course illustrates the complexity
of the relationship by paying attention to both the Christian and the
Jewish perspectives on all of the
issues considered and delineating the
variety of responses within each religious community to the other. The
primary focus is the European Middle Ages, but the origins of the argument a millennium earlier are also
considered.
History of East European Jewry
V78.0171 Identical to V57.0177.
Engel. 4 points.
Comprehensive survey of the history
of Jewish communities in Eastern
Europe from their inception until
World War II, with emphasis on the
Jews of Poland, Russia, and Romania. Economic, sociopolitical, and
religious aspects of Eastern European
Jewry.
American Jewish History
V78.0172 Identical to V57.0689.
Diner. 4 points.
Study of the major events and
personalities in American Jewish
history since colonial times; the
waves of Jewish immigration and
development of the American Jewish
community.
Zionism and the State of Israel
V78.0180 Engel. 4 points.
Examines the history of Zionism as
an ideology and political movement
from its origins in the 19th century
to the present as reflected in the
modern state of Israel. Topics include
ideological foundations, the role of
Herzl and the rise of political
Zionism, the Balfour Declaration,
early Jewish settlement, Zionism
as a cultural entity for Diaspora
Jewry, the Arab-Zionist encounter,
modern Israeli society, and criticism
of Zionism.
Christian-Jewish Relations in
Antiquity and the Middle Ages
V78.0215 Chazan. 4 points.
Examines the social, cultural, and
intellectual contacts between Jews
and Christians from the inception of
Christianity through the end of the
Middle Ages. Explores the similarities and differences between the two
religions and considers both how
they influenced each other and how
they refuted and distanced each other.
Modern Yiddish Literature and
Culture
V78.0664 Staff. 4 points.
An introduction to the literary and
cultural activity of modern Yiddishspeaking Jewish communities in
Eastern Europe, the Soviet Union,
and the United States from 1890 to
1950. Focuses on the distinctive role
that Yiddish played in modern Jewish culture during the first half of
the 20th century, when the language
was the vernacular of the majority of
world Jewry. Examines how “Yiddish
modernism” took shape in different
places and spheres of activity during
a period of extraordinary upheaval.
The Holocaust: The Third Reich
and the Jews
V78.0685 Identical to V57.0808.
Engel. 4 points.
Historical investigation of the evolution of Nazi policies toward Jews; of
Jewish behavior in the face of those
policies; and of the attitudes of other
countries, both within and outside of
the Nazi orbit, toward the situation
of Jews under the rule of the Third
Reich.
Modern American Jewish
Literature and Culture
V78.0779 Staff. 4 points.
Explores the body of imaginative literature—novels, short stories, poetry,
and drama—written by American
Jews. Links these literary works with
the changing position of Jews in
American society.
Seminar: Issues in Jewish History
V78.0800 4 points.
Focuses on a major issue in Jewish
history, to be defined and announced
by the instructor. The seminar
involves students in reading both
primary documents and the relevant
secondary literature. It includes an
original research paper.
JEWISH PHILOSOPHY AND
THOUGHT
Judaism: From Medieval to
Modern Times
V78.0111 Identical to V57.0098,
V90.0683. Ivry. 4 points.
Examines certain continuities and
discontinuities in medieval and modern times in the conception of
Judaism as reflected in selected texts
of the last 1000 years, which express
the full range of Jewish religious and
national creativity. Among the topics
to be discussed are the complex relations of Jewish thinkers to the surrounding non-Jewish cultures and
how these interactions affected the
Jews’ understanding of Judaism. The
approach to this material is intellectual-historical.
Modern Jewish Thought
V78.0112 Wolfson. 4 points.
Comprehensive treatment of the
major intellectual currents in modern Jewish thought. Emphasizes the
question of the Enlightenment and
the effect of modernity on traditional
Judaism. Topics include Enlightenment and the rationalistic identity;
the role of ethics in religion; the
emergence of Reform, neo-Orthodox,
and Conservative Judaism; liberal
rationalist theology and the possibility of revelation; religious and secular
Zionism; the Holocaust; and the creation of the modern State of Israel.
H E B R E W
A N D
Beginnings of Monotheism
V78.0116 Identical to V90.0220.
Fleming. 4 points.
Explores the full range of evidence
that casts light on the appearance of
monotheism in ancient Israel. Israel
was not alone in ascribing priority of
power to a single god, and Israel’s
result is only comprehensible in the
context of these wider currents. Relevant evidence to be examined in this
course includes the Hebrew Bible,
ancient writing from Israel and its
neighbors, and a range of other artifacts.
Jewish Ethics
V78.0117 Rubenstein. 4 points.
Surveys the Jewish ethics of leading
moral issues, including capital punishment; business ethics; self sacrifice, martyrdom, and suicide; truth
and lying; the just war; abortion;
euthanasia; birth control; and political ethics. Explores philosophical
questions concerning the nature of
ethics and methodological issues
related to the use of Jewish sources.
Examines classical Jewish sources
(Bible, Talmud, and medieval codes)
pertaining to ethical issues and discusses the range of ethical positions
that may be based on the sources.
Introduction to Jewish Thought
and Literature
V78.0077 Identical to V90.0077
Rubenstein. 4 points.
Survey of classical Jewish thought
and literature in the rabbinic and
medieval periods. Reading and
analysis of selections from the Mishnah, Midrash, Talmud, and other
medieval texts. Topics include the
nature of God, revelation, suffering,
theodicy, law, redemption, the world
to come, and sin and repentance.
Modern Jewish Philosophies
V78.0640 Ivry, Wolfson. 4 points.
Study of the various philosophies of
Judaism that have been advanced in
modern times. Selections of the
works of the following authors are
read from the perspective of the general philosophical currents of their
time: Moses Mendelssohn, Hermann
Cohen, Franz Rosenzweig, Joseph
Soloveichik, Martin Buber,
Mordechai Kaplan, and Emanuel
Levinas.
J U D A I C
S T U D I E S
•
1 5 5
Jewish Responses to Modernity:
Religion and Nationalism
V78.0719 Identical to V90.0460
Ivry. 4 points.
An examination of the impact of
modernity upon Jewish life and
institutions in the 18th and 19th
centuries, setting the stage for the
Judaism we know in our time. Readings in English from the works of
Moses Mendelssohn, Herzl, Dubnov,
and the leading figures of the newly
emerged Reform, Conservative and
neo-Orthodox movements. The convergence and divergence of nationalist and universalist sentiments are
studied.
understanding the nature of magic as
a phenomenon in society and then
applies those models to help us
understand the different kinds of
magic in Jewish history from biblical
times to the present.
Religion, Magic, and the Jewish
Tradition
V78.0212 Identical to V90.0212
Wolfson. 4 points.
This course examines models for
Jewish Philosophy in the
Medieval World
V78.0425 Identical to V90.0106.
Ivry. 4 points.
Readings in translation and analysis
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HEBREW
AND
MEDIEVAL JEWISH
PHILOSOPHY
Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism
V78.0430 Wolfson. 4 points.
Introduction to the history of the
Kabbalah and Hasidism, emphasizing the significance of these ideas
and their impact on the history of
Judaism.
JUDAIC
STUDIES
of representative selections from the
writings of the major Jewish philosophers of the Middle Ages; emphasis
on Halevi’s Kuzari and Moses Maimonides’s Guide of the Perplexed. Special attention to the cultural context
in which these works were produced.
Independent Study
V78.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. 1-6 points.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Additional graduate-level courses are
open to qualified undergraduates
with permission of the program
adviser.
ALEXANDER S. ONASSIS PROGRAM IN
Hellenic Studies (56)
7 2 6 B R O A D WA Y, 6 T H F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 9 5 8 0 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 3 9 9 0 .
W W W. N Y U . E D U / P A G E S / O N A S S I S .
DIRECTOR OF THE
P R O G R A M:
Professor Mitsis
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Calotychos
DIRECTOR OF LANGUAGE
PROGRAMS:
Senior Language Lecturer
Theodoratou
DIRECTOR OF NYU IN
ATHENS:
Senior Language Lecturer
Theodoratou
Faculty
T
he Alexander S. Onassis Program in Hellenic Studies provides students with a comprehensive and interdisciplinary understanding of the language, literature, history,
and politics of Greece. Through a wide range of courses, students are exposed to a
polyphony of viewpoints that help elucidate the historical and political experiences of
Byzantine, Ottoman, and modern Greece; the ways in which Greece has borne its several
pasts and translated them into the modern era; Greece and its relations to Western Europe,
the Balkans, the Middle East, and Mediterranean cultures; and the distinguished literary
and artistic traditions of a country that many regard as the birthplace of Western civilization, even as these traditions exhibit their multicultural contexts.
NYU’s summer program in Athens combines classroom study of the language, history, and culture of Greece with extracurricular activities and excursions that introduce students to all aspects of Greek life. The program offers a wide range of courses, including
ancient and modern Greek language, Greek Drama, Modern Greek Politics, the City of
Athens, and the Archaeology of Greece. Classes are held at the Al Andar Center, a threestory neoclassical building located in the historical center of Athens. Activities include
walking tours of Athens, visits to monuments and museums, and evening outings to dramatic and musical performances; weekend excursions include trips to several Greek islands,
medieval settlements, and other important historical and archaeological sites. Relevant courses
taken in the academic study program in Greece, NYU in Athens, count toward the major or minor as
regular courses.
Professors:
Mitsis, Sifakis
Assistant Professors:
Baun, Calotychos, Fleming
Affiliated Faculty:
Chioles, Salzmann
Senior Language Lecturer:
Theodoratou
Program
MAJOR
The major consists of 10 courses.
Courses taken in the program’s academic study program in Greece, NYU
in Athens, count toward the major as
regular courses.
A solid foundation in the modern
Greek language is a prerequisite for
all majors. Upon declaring the
major, a student will be expected to
enroll in Elementary Modern Greek I
(V56.0103) or take a placement
examination in the modern Greek
language. By the end of their program, all students must demonstrate
competence in Modern Greek at the
intermediate level through successful
completion of two semesters of inter-
mediate Modern Greek (V56.0105
and V56.0106) or a placement
examination.
Programs of Study: Qualified
students may choose from three proposed areas of concentration:
1. Track A: Language, Literature,
and Culture provides students with a
solid foundation in the modern Greek
HELLENIC
STUDIES
•
157
Courses
language and provides a comprehensive introduction to medieval and
modern Greek literature and culture.
2. Track B: Politics and History
provides students with an interdisciplinary social science perspective on
the medieval and modern Greek experience. Students may choose to concentrate their studies in history or
politics or create their own combination in consultation with the director
of undergraduate studies.
3. Track C: The Classical Legacy
provides students with an interdisciplinary perspective on the reception
of classical Greek thought in postclassical Greece.
Students in tracks A and B who
have placed out of Intermediate Modern Greek are encouraged to take two
semesters of Advanced Modern Greek:
Literature and Civilization I and II
(V56.0107 and V56.0108). Track C
students who place out of Intermediate Modern Greek are encouraged to
take two semesters of Ancient Greek.
All majors are expected to take
two specifically designated survey
courses offered within the program.
Which survey courses they will
choose will depend on the disciplinary concentration that they will
select upon completion of their first
year in the program. Every student
must take at least one designated
survey course in his or her own track
of concentration and one designated
survey course from an outside track
(i.e, students in Track A should take
a Track B survey; students in Track
B, an A survey; students in Track C
should choose from Track A or B).
The following is a list of designated survey courses. One survey course
from each track will be offered each
academic year:
A degree in Hellenic studies is
awarded with honors to students who
complete 40 points of graded work
while maintaining an overall grade
point average of 3.5 and an average
in the major of 3.5, and who successfully complete a program of original
PRIZE
LANGUAGE AND
LITERATURE
of multiple, living Greek realities
through the language. Teaching
materials include current newspaper
articles, graded literary passages,
songs, and various linguistic games.
analysis, advanced composition, and
graded reading. It also provides further practice in speaking and works
to enrich the student’s vocabulary.
Readings and discussions of selected
works of prose, poetry, and theatre
serve as an introduction to aspects of
modern Greek civilization and as an
occasion for comprehensive discussions of contemporary Greek society.
Elementary Modern Greek I, II
V56.0103, 0104 Open to students with
no previous training in Greek and to others by permission of the instructor. 4
points per term.
As an introduction to modern Greek,
this course provides students with
the fundamentals of grammar,
syntax, oral expression, listening
comprehension, reading, and composition. Students develop the skills
and vocabulary necessary to read
simple texts and hold basic conversations. Students are introduced to
modern Greek culture, history, and
society, since the ultimate goal of the
course is to enrich our understanding
158
•
HELLENIC
Track A: V56.0120; V56.0190
Track B: V56.0525; V57.0159;
V56.0112
Track C: V27.0700; V27.0206;
V27.0413; 27.0207; V43.0101
ELECTIVES
Three to five additional Hellenic
studies courses are required. The
exact number of electives will vary
according to language level upon
entrance to the major. Subject to the
approval of the director of undergraduate studies, cognate offerings in
other departments or an approved
internship may be counted toward
the major. A sample list of cognate
courses is available from the program
office.
HONORS PROGRAM
Intermediate Modern Greek I, II
V56.0105, 0106 Prerequisite:
V56.0104 for V56.0105, V56.0105
for V56.0106, or by permission of the
instructor. 4 points per term.
Designed for students who already
have a familiarity with modern
Greek. Students are expected to be
acquainted with the most significant
structures of grammar and syntax
and to have acquired the foundations
for basic conversation in Greek. The
course introduces students to more
complex linguistic and grammatical
STUDIES
research leading to an honors thesis.
The honors thesis is researched and
written while registered in Independent Study, V56.0997 or V56.0998,
under the supervision of a program
faculty member. The thesis topic and
the faculty adviser are chosen in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies. The average length
of the paper is 25 to 40 pages. For
general requirements, see Honors and
Awards. Honors students are encouraged, but not required, to take at
least one appropriate graduate course
in Hellenic studies.
MINOR
Four courses to be chosen from the
list of Hellenic studies course offerings. Students must show proficiency
in modern Greek language by successful completion of either a placement examination or Intermediate
Modern Greek II. Elementary Modern Greek I and II do not count
toward the minor.
Students should consult the director of
undergraduate studies of the program
prior to registering for courses in the
minor.
The Rae Dalven Prize is a monetary
prize awarded annually for the best
term paper in the field of Hellenic
studies. Submissions are not limited
to Hellenic studies majors or minors.
Advanced Modern Greek I, II
V56.0107, 0108 Prerequisite:
V56.0106 or by permission of the
instructor. 4 points per term.
Focusing on advanced composition
and oral practices, this course aims at
refining an understanding and general facility with written and spoken
Greek. Course work is designed to
help students develop a comprehensive vocabulary, improve pronunciation, and increase their effectiveness,
accuracy, and fluency in writing and
speaking the language. Enhances and
perfects reading, speaking, conversational, and writing skills through the
close study of selected modern Greek
literary texts, current newspaper articles and essays, films, advertisements,
and comprehensive discussions of
contemporary Greek society. Explores
major facets and phenomena of Greek
culture: current social and political
issues, events, and controversies in
Greece; Greece’s position “in the
margins of Europe” and at the crossroads of East and West; gender politics; the educational system; the
political landscape; discourses on the
question of Greek identity; topics in
popular culture, etc. Through individual projects, oral reports, class presentation, and written assignments,
students are expected to pursue an indepth “reading” of present-day
Greece.
Memory, History, and Language
in Modern Greek Poetry
V56.0120 4 points.
A survey of 20th-century Greek poetry in a historical and cultural context.
Among the poets studied are C. P.
Cavafy, the Nobel laureates George
Seferis and Odysseus Elytis, the Lenin
Prize-winner Yannis Ritsos, the surrealists Andreas Embiricos and Nikos
Engonopoulos, the postwar generation of poets including Miltos Sahtouris, Takis Sinopoulos, and Manolis
Anagnostakis, and women poets
including Matsi Hatzilazarou and
Kiki Dimoula. Note: All texts are
available in both Greek and English;
critical texts in English only. Class
discussion takes place in English. No
background specific to Greece
required.
Narrative, History, and Fiction in
the Modern Greek Novel
V56.0190 Identical to V29.0190.
4 points.
A survey of the modern Greek novel,
and to a lesser extent the short story,
structured around narrative technique and the claim to fact(s) and/or
fiction(s) in Greece’s turbulent modern history. We read some of the
masterpieces from this tradition as
well as the work of some promising
contemporary writers. Selections also
suggest some recurrent perspectives
on questions of language, gender,
and nation in Greece. Comparative
reference made to other Balkan,
Mediterranean, European, and world
literatures. Note: All texts are available in both Greek and English; critical
texts in English only. Class discussion takes place in English. No background specific to Greece required.
From Classicism to Afrocentrism:
Greece in the West, 1453-Present
V56.0444 Identical to V29.0444.
4 points.
An introductory, selective survey and
critical interpretation of Western
conceptions of the idea of Greece, the
Hellenic, and the Greeks in a variety
of contexts: classical humanism, classical philology, philhellenism, exoticism, orientalism, hellenophobia,
hellenism as paganism, aesthetics,
homosexuality, Romantic nationalism, racism, the Hellenic and the
Hebraic, political correctness and
political chauvinism, hellenophobia,
Afrocentrism, etc. What did such
projections entail for those who
called themselves “Greeks”? Readings
from a range of European literary,
critical and theoretical texts; as well
as modern Greek appropriations of,
and resistances to, such projections.
The 20th-Century Balkans and
Balkanization Through Literature
and Film
V56.0193 Identical to V29.0193.
4 points.
A selective study of the representation of the 20th-century Balkans
through some of the most celebrated
literary works and films of the
region. Considers the presentation of,
and contestation over, a shared historical past through common and
divergent motifs, myths, and narrative devices. Also examines the
region’s political and aesthetic relation to the West in this century.
Ritsos and the Tragic Vision
V56.0229 Formerly V56.0120.
4 points.
How is it that the dead speak? In
what way can the past be said to survive in the present—tragically?
These are the questions around
which Yannis Ritsos’s The Fourth
Dimension is organized. Composed of
a series of dramatic monologues that
move between the past and the present, the dead and the living, Ritsos’s poem demands that we think
about the relations between memory,
history, and language. This course to
traces Ritsos’s poetic strategies by
reading and reconstructing the classical intertexts that inform The
Fourth Dimension. In each instance, it
seeks to analyze the reasons behind
his appropriations, distortions, revisions, and translations of these classical texts.
Seminar on Modern Greek
Culture
V56.0130 Identical to V27.0130.
4 points.
Greek Diaspora: Odyssean
Metaphors from Homer to
Angelopoulos
V56.0333 Identical to V29.0333.
4 points.
Greek stories and myths of dispersal,
settlement, and return have provided
Western culture with some of its
foundational fictions. This course
examines how some of these structuring metaphors and foundational
narratives—notions of home and
exile—have informed the Greeks’
own stories in a variety of geographical and historical contexts and
times: (1) in the historical diaspora
communities of Greeks: in Renaissance Venice; in certain European
urban centers prior to nation-building in the 18th-century Enlightenment; in Alexandria and Smyrna,
now Izmir, of the late 19th century
and early 20th century, and Cyprus;
and (2) among the Greeks of the
United States.
Greek Thinkers
V56.0700 Identical to V27.0700.
4 points.
See course description under
Classics (27).
POLITICS
See course descriptions under
Politics (53).
Modern Greek Politics
V56.0525 Identical to V53.0525.
4 points.
HELLENIC
STUDIES
•
159
Politics of Southern Europe
V56.0527 Identical to V53.0527.
4 points.
Greece and Western Europe
V56.0297 Identical to V57.0297.
4 points.
HISTORY
Transformations of Southern
Europe
V56.0175 Identical to V57.0175.
4 points.
See course descriptions under
History (57).
Byzantine Civilization
V56.0112 Identical to V57.0112 and
V65.0112. 4 points.
Modern Hellenism Since 1821
V56.0159 Identical to V57.0159.
4 points.
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•
HELLENIC
Topics: Medieval History
V56.0260 Identical to V27.0260.
4 points.
Internship
V56.0980 4 points.
The internship offers upper-level students the opportunity to apply their
studies to the outside world. Work-
STUDIES
ing closely with a sponsor and a faculty adviser, students may pursue an
approved internship at a community
radio and television station. Interested students should apply to the
department early in the semester of
their proposed internship.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V56.0997 Prerequisite: Permission of
the department. 2-4 points.
D E PA RT M E N T O F
History (57)
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CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTMENT:
Professor Nolan
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor Ferrer
Faculty
H
istory is the study of human experience of all kinds, considered in relation to particular times and places. It is also a method of thinking characterized by its attention to the contexts in which people have lived and worked. By mastering this
method of thinking, students of history gain invaluable skills and techniques. They learn to
analyze and interpret many different kinds of evidence—cultural, social, economic, and
political—to organize it into a coherent whole and present it clearly with style in written
or oral form. In doing so, students also learn to justify and to question their own and others’ conclusions, for history is always an argument about what actually happened. Indeed,
rethinking and revising accepted historical conclusions is one of the most important—and
most interesting—tasks of the historian.
Notable among the department’s areas of scholarly strength are American urban,
social, labor, and ethnic history; medieval, early modern, and modern European history;
and American and European women’s history. The sub-Saharan African, Latin American, and
Asian areas are also strong and tend to be multidisciplinary. Through independent study and
the Honors Program, students find challenging opportunities for special concentration and
individual research. The internship program enables students to engage in special kinds of
supervised historical projects for credit. Many of the projects are at cultural institutions in
New York and at the United Nations.
The University’s Elmer Holmes Bobst Library is rich in works of history, and students also may also use the collections of the New York Public Library, the historical societies and museums in New York City, and neighboring universities.
Professors Emeriti:
Baker, Bonomi, Callahan, Cantor,
Noss, Prince, Reimers, SanchezAlbornoz, Tan, Unger
Erich Maria Remarque Professor
of European Studies:
Judt
Kenan Professor:
Seigel
University Professor:
Bender
Professors:
Bedos-Rezak, Berenson, Burbank,
Claster, Cooper, Diner, Gomez, Gor-
don, Harootunian, Hsia, Hull,
P. Johnson, Kelley, Kupperman, Lee,
Mattingly, Nolan, Oliva, Sammons,
Scally, Stehlin, Waley-Cohen,
Walkowitz, M. Young
Associate Professors:
Chapman, Duggan, Feros, Ferrer,
Hodes, W. Johnson, Kotsonis, Levy,
Schult, L. Young
Assistant Professors:
Baun, Eustace, Fleming, Goswami,
Grandin, Green, Karl, Krauthamer,
Thomson
ADJUNCT FACULTY
Associate Professors:
Katz, E. Rose, Voorhees, Wosh
AFFILIATED FACULTY
Professors:
Brathwaite, Chazan, S. Cohen,
Cooper, Engel, Gross, Hertzberg,
McChesney, Nelson, Peachin, Peters,
Reid, Sylla
Associate Professors:
R. Cohen, Lockman, Tchen
Assistant Professors:
Fahmey, Haykel, Husain, Salzmann
HISTORY
•
161
Program
MAJOR
A minimum of nine courses (typically 36 points) with a grade of C or
better in each course. Workshop in
History, V57.0900, is required of all
majors. The remaining eight courses
are to be distributed among three
fields of history—American, European, and non-Western (Latin American, Near Eastern, African, or
Asian)—so that the student will
complete at least two courses in each
field. Students must also take one
advances research seminar. One
course must be in a period before
1800. Transfer students must take at
least five history courses (20 points)
in this department.
Certain courses in the Morse Academic Plan may also count towards
the history major. These are Conversations of the West and World Cultures, if they are taught by professors
in the Department of History. Also,
majoring in history exempts students
from taking the Societies and Social
Science component of MAP.
MINOR
At least 16 points in history, of
which 12 points must be taken in
this department. Four points may be
taken in the designated related
Courses
INTRODUCTORY COURSES
History of Western Civilization:
Europe in the Making
V57.0001 4 points.
The making of Europe, from the
classical period to the beginning of
the modern era, was a uniquely creative process. Three main elements
formed the civilization of Europe:
traditions of the Greco-Roman
world, the Germanic peoples entering Europe in the 4th and 5th centuries, and the Judeo-Christian tradition. Examines the fusing of these
elements, the flourishing of European culture in the Middle Ages, and
the transition from the Middle Ages
to early modern times.
History of Western Civilization:
The Rise of Modern Europe
V57.0002 4 points.
Introduces the main social, economic, political, and cultural forces that
shaped European society and
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courses offered in other departments.
Note: Students should consult
the director of undergraduate studies
for possible minor programs, course
offerings, and course descriptions. A
complete listing of history courses
currently offered may be found in the
current class schedule available in the
department.
HONORS PROGRAM
Students with strong academic
records (a GPA of 3.7 in both history
and in the College) may apply to the
director of undergraduate studies for
admission to the History Honors
Program. If students successfully
complete the program, they will be
awarded Honors in History, which
designation will appear on their
diploma. This 8-point program
affords qualified students the opportunity to work closely with faculty
members and to conduct extensive
research on a topic of their choice.
The program consists of a small
Honors Seminar (V57.0994), followed by an individualized Honors
Tutorial (V57.0996). Normally, the
seminar (which counts as an
advanced seminar for the major) is
taken in the first semester of the
senior year, after completion of the
Europe’s relationship to the world
from the 17th century to the present.
Topics: the rise of capitalism and the
industrial revolution; political movements (absolutism, liberalism, socialism, and fascism); intellectual developments (the scientific revolution,
the Enlightenment, Darwinism, and
Freudian psychoanalysis). Concludes
with post-World War II Europe, the
cold war era, and the onset of the
nuclear age.
The United States to 1865
V57.0009 Hodes, W. Johnson.
4 points.
Main currents of American historical
development from the precolonial
epoch to the Civil War. Analysis of
the country’s economic and political
growth, intellectual traditions, and
patterns of social development. Historical development, not as a series of
discrete events, but as an unfolding
process. Topics: Puritanism, mercantilism, the colonial family, the War
for Independence, political party sys-
workshop. In the seminar students
define a thesis topic of their choice,
develop a bibliography, read broadly
in background works, and begin
their research. A substantial part of
the research, usually including a
rough draft of the thesis, should be
completed by the semester’s end. The
tutorial, in which students work on a
one-to-one basis with a faculty director, follows in the second semester.
Theses vary in length from 30 to 70
pages, depending on the nature and
scope of the subject. The completed
thesis, approved for defense by the
director, is defended before a committee of the director and at least one
additional faculty member. A grade
of at least A- is required for the
award of Honors in History. Otherwise, students will simply be awarded 8 points toward the major.
STUDY ABROAD
Some courses offered by NYU Study
Abroad and other approved programs
outside NYU may be eligible for
inclusion in the history major. History majors should consult the director
of undergraduate studies before making plans to study abroad.
tems, the Jeffersonian and Jacksonian
eras, free labor and slavery, Native
American cultures, attitudes of race
and gender, westward expansion, the
industrial revolution, sectionalism,
and the Civil War.
Modern America
V57.0010 Katz, Mattingly. 4 points.
Main developments in American civilization since the end of the Civil
War. Topics: urbanization; industrialization; American reform movements
(populism, progressivism, the New
Deal, and the War on Poverty);
immigration; and the role of women
and blacks in American history.
Beginning with 19th-century American expansion through the SpanishAmerican War, traces the rise of
America to world power, including
World Wars I and II and the cold
war. Emphasizes broad themes and
main changes in American society.
The Civilization and Culture of
the Middle Ages
V57.0011 Identical to V65.0011.
Claster, P. Johnson. 4 points.
Concentrates on the culture of
medieval Europe, a world that produced castles and crusades, cathedrals and tapestries, mystery plays
and epics, and plainsong and philosophy. Examines the richness and
diversity of medieval creativity
through literature, slides, and museum visits.
Modern Europe
V57.0012 Nolan, Seigel, Stehlin.
4 points.
A survey of Europe from 1789 to the
present. Investigates the political,
social, economic, and cultural developments that shaped and continue to
shape the modern age. Emphasis is
on the evolution of the nation-state,
on industrialization and its impact
on society and politics, and on the
intellectual responses to the rapid
changes these developments inspired.
Topics include Europe and the
French Revolution; the rise of the
nation-state, 1848-1914; and the
impact of totalitarian ideologies on
20th-century Europe.
Introduction to Women’s Studies
V57.0013 Identical to V93.0022 and
V97.0010. 4 points.
See description under Gender and Sexuality Studies (97).
Major Themes in World History:
Colonialism and Imperialism
V57.0031 Karl, M. Young. 4 points.
Introduces students to key texts in
and critical methodologies for the
study of modern world history from
the perspective of two of its dominant
themes: imperialism and colonialism.
Helps students theorize and historicize these seemingly well-known and
self-explanatory concepts by introducing them as historically specific theories for understanding the very notion
of “modern world history.” The broad
theoretical consideration is accompanied by a consideration of specific
texts from Asia and the United States,
although not confined to such a bilateral view of the “world.”
World War I
V57.0043 E. Rose. 4 points.
Describes and analyzes the history of
World War I. Although organized
around the war years (1914-1918),
the course does not simply recapitulate battles won and lost. Rather, it
encompasses all aspects of the war
from the perspectives of the various
combatants: the strategies, the tactics, the great engagements, the military and civilian leadership, the
experience of the men in the trenches, and the nature of the societies
from which they came. Slide photos,
weapons, broadside posters, films,
and taped music help students visualize the time and the events surrounding this momentous upheaval.
World War II
V57.0045 E. Rose. 4 points.
Describes and analyzes the history of
World War II chronologically from
1939 to 1945. Like the course on
World War I, this is not simply a
study of battles. All aspects of the
war, from the great civilian and military leaders to the common soldiers,
are discussed, as are social, cultural,
and economic changes on the various
home fronts. Illustrates personalities
and events through slides, contemporary literature, photos and posters,
and the music of the time.
History of Modern Asia or
Modern Japan Since 1850
V57.0053 Identical to V33.0053.
Karl, L. Young, M. Young. 4 points.
Survey of developments in 19th- and
early 20th-century East Asia, modernization, Westernization, and war,
with emphasis on the different
responses of China and/or Japan to
Western economic encroachment and
ideological change.
Introduction to Pan-Africanism
V57.0054 Identical to V11.0010.
Kelley. 4 points.
See description under Africana
Studies (11).
History of African Civilizations to
the 19th Century
V57.0055 Identical to V11.0055.
Gomez, Hull. 4 points.
Exploration of selected precolonial
cultural, political, economic, legal,
and religious systems. Complemented with films, tapes, and artifacts.
Students may focus on specific topics.
History of African Civilizations
During the 19th and 20th
Centuries
V57.0056 Identical to V11.0056.
Gomez, Hull. 4 points.
The second part of a two-semester
sequence designed to further
acquaint students with the major
themes of African development.
Beginning with a discussion of transAtlantic, trans-Saharan Red Sea and
Indian Ocean slave trades, the course
winds along paths that flow through
the thematic lands of Islamic revival
in West Africa, the onset of European colonialism, the African struggle against colonialism, and the legacies of these experiences in modern
Africa. Issues of gender, religion,
race, and economy are the threads
connecting the discourse throughout.
In some ways, the course serves to
explain contemporary realities in the
African continent with special attention given to the history and challenges of South Africa.
What Is Islam?
V57.0085 Identical to V77.0691 and
V90.0085. Peters. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Anatomy of War
V57.0089 E. Rose. 4 points.
Deals with the history and nature of
war. Organized around the concept
of war as a process with a beginning,
middle, and end. Begins by examining the “setting of war,” looking at
those activities and perceptions that
precede actual combat. The middle
portion of the course concerns the
“experience of war,” analyzing the
behavior of troops in the stress of
combat. Finally, we discuss the
“consequences of war” and consider
the impact on those who have survived a war.
INTRODUCTORY SEMINARS
FOR FRESHMEN AND
SOPHOMORES
The following introductory seminars
are open to freshmen and sophomores. They do not require permission from the director of undergraduate studies. The topics vary yearly
depending on the instructor. See the
director of undergraduate studies or
the class schedule for available seminars. These do not satisfy the major
requirement for advanced research
seminar.
Seminar: Topics in European
History
V57.0091 4 points.
Seminar: Topics in European
History
V57.0093 2 points.
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•
163
Seminar: Topics in American
History
V57.0092 4 points.
Seminar: Topics in American
History
V57.0094 2 points.
Seminar: Topics in Asian History
V57.0095 Identical to V33.0095.
4 points.
Seminar: Topics in Latin
American History
V57.0096 4 points.
Seminar: Topics in Comparative
History
V57.0097 4 points.
ADVANCED COURSES
EUROPEAN HISTORY
The Early Middle Ages
V57.0111 Identical to V65.0111.
Baun, Claster, P. Johnson. 4 points.
Europe in the early Middle Ages was
created out of a mixture of ingredients—the legacy of the Roman
empire; the growth and development
of Christianity; invading peoples who
settled within the boundaries of the
former Roman Empire; the clash of
competing languages, religions, and
legal systems. This tumultuous time
forged a new entity: medieval
Europe, whose development, growing pains, and creative successes we
examine. Uses the records and artifacts of the period itself as central
elements for investigating the period.
Byzantine History
V57.0112 Identical to V65.0112.
Baun. 4 points.
The “other” Middle Ages. An
overview of the medieval civilization
and culture of the Byzantine Empire
and its sphere of influence—southern
Italy, Greece, and the Balkans;
Turkey and the Near East; Slavic
Eastern Europe; and Ethiopia. Topics
include the construction of a Christian Empire, the dialogue of pagan
and Christian culture, the challenge
of Islam, the conversion of the Slavs,
the growth of a multicultural empire,
the adaptation of Hellenic paradigms
by non-Greeks, Byzantium between
Latin West and Islamic East.
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HISTORY
The Crusades
V57.0113 Identical to V65.0113.
Claster, P. Johnson. 4 points.
The history of the Crusades (10951291). The Crusades are an important
first chapter in European imperialism
and a manifestation of deep religious
conviction. Examines the background
in Europe leading to the Crusades;
the social, political, and economic situation in the eastern Mediterranean
before the Crusades; the fortunes of
the Crusader (Latin) Kingdom of
Jerusalem; and the reactions of Europeans and Easterners to one another.
Examines and reevaluates the legacy
of the Crusades on both the Eastern
and Western worlds.
The Central Middle Ages
V57.0114 Identical to V65.0114.
Claster, P. Johnson. 4 points.
Covers the period from the late 11th
century to the close of the 14th century. Major topics and themes: the
explosion of energy in the 12th century and the expansion of Europe on
all levels, geographic (including the
Crusades) as well as intellectual;
development of agriculture and
cities; the diversity that gave rise to
our university system; movements of
reform and dissent; and the waning
of the Middle Ages.
Early Medieval Italy
V57.0120 Identical to V65.0120.
Baun. 4 points.
The Italian peninsula from the later
Roman Empire to the Ottonians,
400-1000. Surveys cultural and religious as well as political developments in the many Italys of the period: Roman, Ostrogothic, Byzantine,
Lombard, Carolingian, Ottonian. Special attention given to local Italian
regions and to the larger European
context. Themes include the dichotomy between North and South, the
shifting fortunes of Rome, the Byzantine presence, attempts to achieve unified rule and to reconstitute the old
Empire, the role of church and papacy.
The Renaissance
V57.0121 Identical to V65.0121.
Feros. 4 points.
Focuses chiefly on Italy during the
quattrocento, in an effort to locate
sources of the new ideas of the
Renaissance. Also covers France,
Spain, the Netherlands, and Germany in some detail. Gives particular
attention to the sociopolitical nature
of monarchy and of ruling elites.
The Protestant and Catholic
Reformations
V57.0122 Identical to V65.0122.
Hsia. 4 points.
The social and political aspects of the
Protestant and Catholic Reformations, with equal stress on the crucial
doctrinal issues that separated Protestants and Catholics in 16th-century
Europe. Topics discussed include preReformational controversies, the
Calvinist moral establishment in
Geneva, Luther in Germany, Zwingli
in Zurich, the Anabaptists, the
Jesuits, the Council of Trent, and
Roman humanism.
Mediterranean Worlds
V57.0131 Identical to V77.0660.
Salzmann. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Italy in the Age of Dante and
Petrarch
V57.0132 Identical to V65.0132.
4 points.
The history of northern Italy from the
late 12th to the late 14th century.
Particular attention is given to the
years from 1300 on, roughly the lifetimes of Dante and Petrarch. Focus is
on politics and society, but economic
developments and popular culture are
also covered. Topics include the origins of the commune, the rise of the
popolo, republics and despotisms, the
impact of Franciscanism, the emergence of a civic spirit, the golden age
of the Italian economy, and the social
and cultural changes brought about
by the Black Death.
European Intellectual History,
1600-1789
V57.0136 Levy. 4 points.
Examines the relation between institutional and economic changes and
the development of European
thought, particularly in political and
social theory, ethics, and definitions
of human personality and the natural
universe. Embraces the period from
the general European crisis of the late
16th century to the eve of the revolutionary era in the 18th century. Studies principal works of major intellectuals in the contexts of their biographies and sociocultural environments.
Golden Age of Spain, 1450-1700
V57.0138 Identical to V65.0138.
Feros. 4 points.
Covers the political, religious, and
intellectual history of Spain from the
reign of the Catholic kings (Isabella
and Ferdinand) in the late 15th century to the ascension of the Bourbons
in the early 18th. Subjects include the
creation and evolution of the worldwide Spanish monarchy; the economic
and cultural consequences of the conquest and colonization of the Indies;
Christians, Moors, and Jews in Golden Age Spain; art, literature, and society; and Spain’s decline and isolation.
French Revolution and Napoleon
V57.0143 Levy. 4 points.
Following an analysis of cultural,
social, political, and economic conditions in France before 1789, the
course follows the Revolution through
its successive phases. Narrates and
analyzes the rise of Napoleon and his
consolidation of France, his conquests
and the spread of his system, and his
eventual overthrow.
Development of the Modern
European State, 1815-1914
V57.0147 Stehlin. 4 points.
Political, economic, social, and cultural developments in Europe from
1815 to 1914. The problem posed:
How did Europe become a functional
entity and meet its problems in terms
of political institutions, social movements, and cultural developments,
which culminated in a changed relationship of the individual to the
state? What forces shaped European
society and prepared it for the 20th
century? Discusses trends such as
socialism, conservatism, liberalism,
and romanticism and their effect on
and interrelationship with political
and social developments.
Atlantic Migrations, 1500-1945
V57.0149 Identical to V58.0149.
Scally. 4. points.
This course explores the movement of
peoples across and within the four
continents bordering the Atlantic
Ocean, from the voyages of discovery
to the era of trans-Atlantic flight.
Topics treated include early imaginings of the western hemisphere,
interactions among the peoples of the
four continents and the Atlantic
islands, forced and free migrations
from Europe and Africa, patterns of
settlement, technologies and
economies of travel, the role of port
cities, maritime labor, emigrant voyages by sail and steam, and the evolution of an Atlantic economy.
Development of the Modern
European State Since 1914
V57.0151 Stehlin. 4 points.
Study of political, economic, social,
and cultural developments in Europe
since 1914. The problem posed: How
did Europe become a functional entity
and meet its problems in terms of
state structure, political institutions,
social movements, and cultural developments? How did the individual’s
relation to the state change? What
forces shaped European society and
led to today’s world? Studies the effects
of both world wars and movements
such as fascism and communism.
European Thought and Culture,
1750-1870
V57.0153 Seigel. 4 points.
Study of major themes in European
intellectual history from the end of
the Enlightenment to the last
decades of the 19th century, considered in the light of the social and
political contexts in which they arose
and the cultural backgrounds that
helped shape them. Topics include
romanticism, liberal and radical
social theory, aestheticism, the late
19th-century crisis of values, and the
rise of modern social science.
European Thought and Culture
1880-1990
V57.0154 Seigel. 4 points.
Study of major themes in European
intellectual history from the fin de
siècle down to the 1980s, considered
in the light of the social and political
contexts in which they arose and the
cultural backgrounds that helped
shape them. Topics include new
Marxisms, avant-gardes, Weimar and
Bauhaus, Andre Malraux, Sartre,
Levi-Strauss, Habermas, and Foucault.
Europe Since 1945
V57.0156 Prerequisite: at least one
course in European history. Judt.
4 points.
Covers the impact of World War II,
the postwar division of Europe, the
onset of the cold war, the economic
recovery and transformation of Western Europe, Stalinism in Eastern
Europe, the 1960s and events of
1968, the origins and development of
the European community, and the
cultural and intellectual life of European nations in this period. Ends
with a discussion of the Eastern European revolutions of 1989 and their
significance, together with the reunification of Germany, for the future of
the continent.
Modern Hellenism Since 1821
V57.0159 Fleming. 4 points.
Examines Greece’s transformation
from a traditional Ottoman society
into a modern European state, the
parallel evolution of Greek diaspora
communities, and the changes in
homeland-diaspora relations. Topics
include state building, relations with
Turkey and the Balkan states,
emigration, liberalism and modernization, the old and new diaspora,
interwar authoritarianism, occupation
and resistance in the 1940s, the
Greek civil war, Greece and NATO,
the Cyprus crisis, the Greek American lobby, and Greece and European
integration.
Modern Germany Since 1815
V57.0167 Stehlin. 4 points.
Covers the political, economic, and
social aspects of German history
since 1815. Stresses questions such as
the reasons for German political disunity until 1871, the responsibility
of imperial Germany for World War I,
the effect of the war on the German
people and their problems with
establishing a viable democracy, and
the causes for the rise of Hitler.
Modern Italy Since 1815
V57.0168 Judt. 4 points.
A survey of Italian history in all its
major aspects in the 19th and 20th
centuries. Analyzes in its European
context the transformation of the
Italian state and society since its unification to the republic. Particular
emphasis on the political system and
its difficulties in adapting to industrialization and modernization, especially in recent years.
Modern France Since 1815
V57.0169 Judt. 4 points.
Examines the ways in which France’s
development from a traditional into
a modern society was highlighted at
each stage by political revolutions,
class antagonisms, and cultural innovations. Discusses the role of the
state in society and France’s activities
as a world and colonial power.
Russian Expansionism
V57.0170 Kotsonis. 4 points.
The dynamics of Russian expansionism from the time of Muscovite
struggle with the Mongols and the
enunciation of the doctrine of Moscow
as the third Rome to that of the
Brezhnev doctrine and the Afghanistan
war. Emphasizes the topics of geography, war, rebellion, ideology, and
HISTORY
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165
imperialism as reflected in Russian
expansion into Eastern Europe, the
Balkans, the Middle East, Central
Asia, and China.
The Irish in New York
V57.0180 Identical to V58.0180.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
Topics in Irish History
V57.0181 Identical to V58.0181.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
History of Modern Ireland,
1580-1800
V57.0182 Identical to V58.0182.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
History of Modern Ireland,
1800-1922
V57.0183 Identical to V58.0183.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
History of Modern Ireland,
1922-Present
V57.0184 Identical to V58.0184.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
European Migration to America:
The Irish and Jewish Experiences
V57.0186 Identical to V78.0686.
Diner, Scally. 4 points.
Looks at the comparative experiences
of two immigrant groups to the United States, the Irish and East European
Jews. Explores the forces that propelled the migrants out of their
homes and the ways in which they
created communities and new identities in America. Because of its
comparative nature, this course asks
students to seek both similarities and
differences in those migrations. Additionally there have been numerous
points of interaction between Jews and
Irish. Focuses on how these two groups
understood and related to each other.
The Irish in America
V57.0187 Identical to V58.0187.
4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
European Diplomacy to 1900
V57.0193 Stehlin. 4 points.
Deals with the major diplomatic
events from 1789 to 1900. The
diplomatic aspects of such topics as
the French and Napoleonic Wars,
European restoration, national unification, imperialism, and Bismarck
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HISTORY
settlement are discussed as well as
their relation to political, economic,
and social events.
European Diplomacy Since 1900
V57.0194 Stehlin. 4 points.
Deals with the major diplomatic
events from 1900 to 1939. The
diplomatic aspects of such topics as
the various crises in the century’s first
decade, the origins and results of
World War I, the search for security
in the 1920s, and Nazi and Fascist
policy and the coming of World War II
are discussed as well as their relation to
political, economic, and social events.
Women in European Society
Since 1750
V57.0196 Nolan. Identical to
V97.0196. 4 points.
Examines critically the public and
private lives of European women from
1750 to the present. An introduction
discusses the theory and methods of
using gender as a category in history
and proceeds to a chronological survey
of women’s experience from both a
social and a political viewpoint.
Women are examined as participants
in war and revolution as well as workers, consumers, and mothers in everyday life. The focus is primarily on
France, Germany, and England, with
some reference to women’s experience
in America.
Modern Imperialism
V57.0198 Fulfills non-Western course
requirement for the major. Hull. 4 points.
Conquest, domination, and exploitation in the 19th and 20th centuries
in Africa, Asia, and North America.
Compares the imperialism of Western
Europeans and Americans as well as
non-Western peoples. Examines general, technological, environmental,
cultural, political, and economic causes. Focuses on the effects of imperialism on conquered societies: the Chinese after the Opium Wars, the Plains
Indians of North America, the Sotho
of South Africa after the Mfecane and
Great Trek, and the Indians after the
Great Mutiny. Theory, practice, and
results of modern imperialism.
UNITED STATES HISTORY
American Colonial History to 1763
V57.0601 Kupperman. 4 points.
Examines European expansion in the
early modern period and the creation
of an interconnected Atlantic world
with particular emphasis on North
America and the Caribbean. Atten-
tion to the roles of Europeans,
American natives, and Africans in
forming systems of trade and patterns of settlement as well as the
evolution of slavery and the development of new political structures,
changing religious beliefs, and evolving family relationships in America.
Assesses the imperial context of these
developments.
American Natives in Early
American History
V57.0602 Kupperman. 4 points.
Focuses on the relationship between
Indians and Europeans roughly within the future United States from first
contact through the period of Indian
Removal. Examines colonialism’s
impact on Indian societies and the
broad variety of techniques native
leaders used in attempting to control
the relationship. Looks at changing
Euramerican attitudes through the
colonial period and the role of imperial conflict and American independence on policy development. Assesses the pressure created by Euramerican westward migration before and
after the War of 1812, Indian resistance, and the campaign for removal
of Indians beyond the Mississippi.
Era of the American Revolution,
1763-1789
V57.0603 4 points.
Examination of the conflicts that
developed between England and her
American colonies in the 1760s and
1770s, patterns of protest and confrontation, the American Revolution,
the debate on constitutional principles,
and the framing of new state governments and of the U.S. Constitution.
Religion, Family, and Gender in
Early America, 1607-1840
V57.0604 4 points.
Conducted as a reading and discussion class. Measures the shaping
influence of religion on family life
and gender relationships from the
founding of the American colonies in
1607 to the Second Great Awakening
in the 19th century. Readings examine the effects of evangelical as well as
more traditional religion on the men
and women, husbands and wives,
parents and children, and masters and
slaves in the early years of the nation.
The Early American Republic,
1789-1848
V57.0605 Schult. 4 points.
Surveys the formation of the American republic and its implementation
under the Constitution of 1787.
Concentrates on the first and second
American party systems, the impact
of evolutionary democracy on the
political process, and the development of American sectionalism.
Examines political, social, and economic events in the context of the
United States as an emerging nation
in the Western world.
links between domestic concerns and
foreign policy goals, especially concerning communism and the cold war;
growth of a postindustrial state with
a significant impact on the economy
and daily lives; demands for social
equality and diversity in postwar life;
and underlying social, economic, and
demographic changes shaping American lives in the postwar era.
European Travelers in America
V57.0606 Schult. 4 points.
Through reading and discussion, this
course explores the observations,
reactions, and commentary of some
of the leading European travelers to
the young United States during the
first half of the 19th century. The
curious Europeans included Alexis de
Tocqueville, Frances Trollope, Harriet Martineau, Charles Dickens,
William Russell, and Anthony Trollope. They were eager to learn something of the manners, the customs,
the character, and the strange institutions of these frontier people.
There is a written assignment relating to each of the travelers.
Sport in American Society
V57.0615 Prerequisite: V57.0009,
V57.0010, or V57.0648, or permission
of the instructor. Sammons. 4 points.
Demonstrates that sport is an important cultural, political, and socioeconomic asset revealing much about
society. Shows how sport is an instrument of control and liberation.
Attempts to elevate sport’s position
as a legitimate scholarly subject by
relating it to race, gender, class, and
violence. Combines theory, fact, and
interpretation and focuses on the
19th and 20th centuries with some
background information on ancient
sport and early American attitudes
toward sport, leisure, and recreation.
Era of the Civil War and
Reconstruction
V57.0607 Hodes. 4 points.
Social history of the Civil War and
Reconstruction with crucial attention
to politics and economics. Focuses on
sectional conflict over systems of free
labor and slave labor, with close
attention to class conflicts within the
North; conflicts between slaves and
masters in the South; conflicts among
white Southerners; and conflicts
among African American freedpeople,
white Northerners, and white Southerners after the war. Concludes with
an assessment of the era’s legacies.
Violence in American History
V57.0616 Walkowitz. 4 points.
Analysis of the nature, extent, and
causes underlying collective protest
and reaction in America from the
17th century to the present. Considers the preindustrial crowd; vigilantism; and the problems of slavery,
Native American genocide, revolution, and war. Special attention to
urban racial violence, labor-management conflict, and antiwar (student)
protest of the late 19th and 20th
centuries.
America in the Early 20th Century
V57.0609 Mattingly. 4 points.
The political, economic, and foreign
relation developments in the period
from the Spanish-American War
through the Hoover years. Topics
such as imperialism, the Progressive
Era, issues of war and peace, dissent,
political suppression, and economic
collapse. Emphasis on the conflicting
perceptions and evaluations of these
events among historians.
Postwar America: 1945 to the
Present
V57.0612 4 points.
General introduction to the history
of the United States from 1945 to
the present. Major themes include
United States Foreign Policy
V57.0622 4 points.
A survey of foreign relations from
the era in which the United States
was an underdeveloped nation to its
role as world superpower. In addition
to examining policy formation, the
course considers U.S. involvement in
foreign wars, trade, and cultural
exchange.
The Frontier in American History
V57.0625 Schult. 4 points.
Emphasizes the intrusion into Indian
country and its dilemmas; relations
between whites and Indians; the settling of new environments; the
impact of technology, diplomacy,
war, racism, and government policy
on the development of the West; territorial developments; the distinctive
personalities of westward expansion;
the legend and romance about the
West; and the meaning of the frontier experience to the development of
American society.
Introduction to Asian/Pacific/
American Experience
V57.0626 Identical to V15.0010.
Tchen. 4 points.
See description under Asian/Pacific/
American Studies (15).
History of African American
Family Life 19th Century
V57.0627 Krauthamer. 4 points.
Focuses on the ways in which
enslaved and free African American
men and women organized their
families and communities in 19thcentury America. We ask the following: How did slavery, religion,
emancipation, education, labor patterns, and class divisions shape the
lives of African American individuals
and families? Finally, we consider historical and contemporary representations of African American families.
American Indian Policy:
Indian-White Relations, 1750 to
the Present
V57.0628 Schult. 4 points.
Historical development of Indianwhite relations and the formation of
major federal policies toward the
Native American from the experiences in late colonial America to the
present. Includes the nature of relations between the Indian and the
white man in America, the formation and implementation of policies
to deal with that relationship, the
Indian dilemma in an expansive
American society, the impact of historical change on major Indian
tribes, and the significant influences
of Indian and white leaders.
American Social History
V57.0629 Mattingly. 4 points.
Studies the development of the
American social structure from the
founding of the colonies to the present. Special attention to family, ethnic and racial minorities, women,
and the American class structure and
to modernization, urbanization, and
industrialization and their impact on
American society.
American Social Institutions,
1880-1980
V57.0630 Mattingly. 4 points.
Begins with the post-Civil War period and explores selected social issues
HISTORY
•
167
before the emergence of a clear policy
process. Pays close attention to the
changes that issues undergo as they
confront the structures of industrial
capitalism, urban bureaucracies, and
governmental politics. Issues examined include education, health,
poverty, racial and gender discrimination, and the ongoing dilemma of
social planning in an American
democracy.
The Old South in America to 1862
V57.0632 Schult. 4 points.
Begins with a survey of the economic
and social development of the southern Atlantic and Gulf Coast frontiers,
including the French, English, and
Spanish rivalries and the place of the
Native Americans. Centers on the
political, economic, social, and cultural developments of the Old South
through early national and antebellum America to secession and the
creation of the Confederacy. Slavery,
slave trade, the plantation system,
urban life, southern business enterprise, regional diversity, and significant historical personalities.
Women in American Society
V57.0635 Identical to V97.0635.
Gordon. 4 points.
This course has two themes: how
maleness and femaleness (gender)
have changed in the last 150 years,
and how women’s lives in particular
have been transformed. It emphasizes
not only the malleability of gender,
but also the way that gender systems
have varied in different class, race,
ethnic and religious groups. We look
at women and gender in politics, in
work, in family and personal relationships, in sexuality and in culture.
New York City: A Cultural
History
V57.0638 Bender. 4 points.
Explores the cultural history of New
York City in the 19th and 20th centuries. Special attention to literary
and pictorial symbolizations of the
city, urban development and urban
aesthetics, and the institutions and
traditions of intellectual and cultural
creativity. At least one walking tour.
New York City: A Social History
V57.0639 Identical to V99.0330.
Walkowitz. 4 points.
Examines key themes in the social
history of New York City: the pattern of its physical and population
growth, its social structure and class
relations, ethnic and racial groups,
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•
HISTORY
municipal government and politics,
family and work life, and institutions
of social welfare and public order.
American Intellectual History,
1750-1930
V57.0643 Prerequisite: survey course on
American history, American literature, or
American political theory. Bender.
4 points.
Explores selected practical and prescriptive visions of American culture
and politics articulated by writers,
intellectuals, and political leaders
since 1750. The work of the course is
the reading and interpreting of key
texts in their intellectual, political,
and social contexts. Concerns itself
with the interplay between ideas and
experience, and politics and culture.
U.S. Borderlands: Culture,
Conflict, and Conquest
V57.0645 Krauthamer. 4 points.
Examines the history of the U.S.
Southwest—the borderlands—in the
18th and 19th centuries. Covers the
history of the indigenous peoples in
this region, Spanish and Mexican
control of the area, and the struggles
between Mexico and the U.S. to lay
claim to the land. Readings and lectures focus closely on the ways in
which communities and cultures developed and interacted in a region where
territorial borders between nations
were often unclear and shifting.
African American History to 1865
V57.0647 Identical to V11.0647.
Kelley, Krauthamer, Sammons. 4 points.
Survey of the experience of African
Americans to 1865, emphasizing living conditions, treatment, images,
attitudes, important figures and events,
and culture using a chronological
and topical approach. Topics include
African way of life, initial contact
between Africans and Europeans, slave
trade, early slavery, freedom and control in slave society, abolitionism, slave
resistance, free blacks, and gender.
African American History Since
1865
V57.0648 Identical to V11.0648.
Kelley, Sammons. 4 points.
Survey of the experience of African
Americans from the Civil War to the
present, including themes such as
freedom and equality, migratory
movements, cultural contributions,
military participation, civil rights
activism, black power, and contemporary conditions. Topics include the
Reconstruction, white supremacy,
black thought and protest, Washington and Du Bois debate, rise of the
NAACP, World War I, the Harlem
Renaissance, communism, World
War II, civil rights, black power,
black nationalism, and blacks and
Reagan.
American Social Movements
V57.0652 Gordon. 4 points.
An examination of large-scale social
movements in the 20th century, as
well as a brief introduction to socialmovement theory. We examine civil
rights, populism, feminism, labor
union activism, the old and new left,
the right-to-life movement, and the
new Christian Right in general.
Questions include the following:
How do social movements construct
identities and how do identities
affect social movements? How do
social movements use or repress multiple identities? When are social
movements political? How and when
do social movements yield or grow
out of organizations and what is the
impact of the relation between movements and organizations? Are there
elite social movements? Do social
movements have to be democratic?
When do social movements become
violent? Are social movements
inevitably vulnerable to demagoguery and authoritarianism?
Race, Gender, and Sexuality in
U.S. History
V57.0655 Identical to V97.0993.
Duggan, T. Rose. 4 points.
Drawing primarily on the histories of
hetero- and homosexual African
Americans and women, this course
explores the intersection of race, gender, and sexuality in 19th- and 20thcentury American history. Throughout U.S. history, the social, economic,
moral, and political arguments
advanced to sustain the subordination
of people of color, women, and gays
and lesbians have frequently revolved
around the sphere of sexuality. We
explore important historical subjects
such as abolition, lynching, welfare debates, teenage pregnancy policies,
reproductive rights, and the Black
Power movement with special attention paid to the intertwined histories of
racial, gender, and sexual oppression.
Women and Slavery in the
Americas
V57.0660 Krauthamer. 4 points.
This course examines the history of
African and African American
women enslaved in the United States
and Caribbean. The course begins
with African slavery and the emergence of the Atlantic slave trade and
then follows the forced migration of
African women to the Americas.
Readings address issues such as
resistance, religion, labor, and reproduction and also cover theoretical
questions about the dynamics of
ideas of status, race, and gender. The
course ends with a section on the
legacy of slavery in contemporary
representations of African and
African American women.
African American Autobiography
V57.0688 Sammons. 4 points.
By approaching autobiogrophy as
equally sociological, historical, and
literary, this course facilitates a better
understanding of the genre and
opens new means of communication
between disciplines in unraveling the
meanings of human expression and
experience. Sociological and historical issues raised by the materials are
considered in tandem with the formal and stylistic means through
which those issues are shaped in the
works at hand.
American Jewish History
V57.0689 Identical to V78.0172.
Diner. 4 points.
Surveys the history of the Jewish
people in America from the middle
of the 17th century until the present.
Focuses on the social, cultural, political, and religious development of the
Jewish community against the backdrop of American history. The course
seeks to identify and explain both
the preservation of tradition and patterns of innovation. Examines both
the inner lives of American Jews and
their communities and the kinds of
relationships they had with the larger, American world.
HISTORY OF ASIA, AFRICA, AND
LATIN AMERICA
The Ottoman Empire in World
History
V57.0515 Identical to V77.0650,
V65.0651. Salzmann. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Modernism and the Formation of
National Culture in Japan,
1900-1980
V57.0530 Identical to V33.0730.
Harootunian. 4 points.
See description under East Asian
Studies (33).
The Emergence of the Modern
Middle East
V57.0531 Identical to V77.0690.
4 points.
Surveys main political, social, economic, and intellectual currents of
the 20th century. Emphasis on historical background and development
of current problems in region. Topics
include imperialism, nationalism,
religion, Orientalism, women, class
formation, oil, the Arab-Israeli crisis,
and the Iranian revolution.
Europe and the Middle East in
Historical Perspective
V57.0534 Identical to V77.0689.
Lockman. 4 points.
Survey of economic, political, and
cultural relations between Europe
and the Middle East. Attention paid
at the outset to the structure of the
“Muslim state” and Islamic society,
with special reference to the
Ottoman Empire. Stresses the
dynamics of social, economic, and
political change in the Middle East
in the 19th and 20th centuries, a
consequence of dramatic expansion of
European influence in the region.
Middle Eastern ideological, cultural,
and political responses to European
expansion and dominance.
Gender and Radicalism in
Modern China
V57.0536 Identical to V33.0536 and
V97.0536. Karl. 4 points.
Examines the interrelated rise of
political, ideological, and cultural
radicalisms and of gender issues as a
major subject and object of transformative social activity in 19th- and
20th-century China. Introduces
approaches to gender theory and historical analysis through the use of
primary and secondary sources on
China, as well as through films and
other visuals. Emphasis is on
synthesizing contradictory material
and on historical analytical issues.
Heavy writing and class discussion
component.
History of Modern Japan
V57.0537 Identical to V33.0537.
L. Young. 4 points.
Emphasizes historical problems in
Japan’s economic development, their
challenge to political and social institutions, and their role in shaping foreign policy. Focuses on Japan’s transition from an agrarian economy to
commercial capitalism, from hierarchical social organization to constitutional authority, and from isolation
from the rest of the world to involvement with Western culture and
diplomatic relations. Traces Japan’s
development into an industrial giant
fully engaged in world affairs.
Chinese Society and Culture,
1550-1950
V57.0539 Identical to V33.0539.
Waley-Cohen. 4 points.
Examines social and cultural life in
early modern China through the
Republican era; focuses on causes and
effects of change and continuity.
Covers scholarly elites, workers, peasants, bandits, women, and others.
Topics include family life, religion
and ritual, law and order, urbanization and city life, religion and secret
societies, militarization, and the role
of intellectuals. Emphasis on contemporaneous materials with attention to discrepancies between Chinese and Western sources.
Arts of War in China
V57.0544 Identical to V33.0244.
Waley-Cohen. 4 points.
See description under East Asian
Studies (33).
Topics in Chinese History
V57.0551 Identical to V33.0551.
Karl, Waley-Cohen, M. Young. 4 points.
Specific topics vary from time to
time and may include Women and
Gender in Chinese History; Rebellion and Revolution in China, 16831864; The Manchus in China; Urban
China; American Wars in Asia; China
in Revolution, 1949-Present; China
After Mao; Maoism and China.
The History of Religions in
Africa
V57.0566 Identical to V11.0566.
Hull. 4 points.
Covers (1) traditional African religions, including the myths of origin;
concepts of the individual and the
Supreme Being; the individual’s relation to the universe; links between
the world of the living and the spiritual; ancestral worship, divinities,
witches, and sorcerers; and sacrifice,
prayer, birth, and death; (2) the
impact of Islam on traditional
African religions and the spread of
Islam; (3) the impact of Christianity
and missionary enterprise in the late
19th and early 20th centuries in subSaharan Africa; and (4) the impact of
secular culture on religions in subSaharan Africa.
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•
169
History of Contemporary Africa
V57.0567 Identical to V11.0567.
Gomez, Hull. 4 points.
Examines the history of sub-Saharan
Africa from World War II to the present, through lectures, discussions,
films, and musical tapes. Attempts to
probe the roots of key crises facing
Africa today. These include genocide,
refugees, population, famine, governance, urban decay, environmental
deterioration, AIDS, religious extremism, and arrested economic development. The roots of regenerative forces
are also explored, particularly in the
areas of agriculture and the arts.
History of Southern Africa
V57.0568 Identical to V11.0568.
Hull. 4 points.
Exploration and analysis of the political, social, and economic development of African nations south of the
Zambezi River from 1700 to the present. Focuses on South Africa,
Namibia, Zimbabwe, Botswana, and
Mozambique.
Vietnam: Its History, Its Culture,
and Its Wars
V57.0737 Identical to V33.0737.
Roberts, M. Young. 4 points.
See description under East Asian
Studies (33).
History of Colonial Latin America
V57.0743 Thomson. 4 points.
This course introduces students to the
colonial origins of the Latin American
region and the ways they have shaped
the present. It follows the unfolding
and demise of a new social order
under European rule, over a period
spanning from the 16th-century conquest through the early 19th-century
wars of independence. Specific topics
include: Inca and Aztec worlds; Indian-European confrontations; the
Catholic church and popular religiosity; patriarchy and honor codes; racial
dynamics and slavery; the development of capitalism; anticolonial
struggles; imperial rivalry; reform;
decline; and colonial legacies.
History of Modern Latin America
V57.0745 Ferrer, Grandin. 4 points.
A comparative survey of Latin American social, economic, cultural, and
political history from 1800 to the
present.
Topics in Latin American and
Caribbean History
V57.0750 Ferrer, Grandin, Thomson.
4 points.
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•
HISTORY
Focuses on varying groupings of historical experiences in selected countries of Latin America and the
Caribbean or on thematic issues on
the history of the region. Recent topics
include race and ethnicity in Latin
America, History and Revolution in
Cuba, and Latin American populism.
History of Mexico and Central
America
V57.0752 Grandin. 4 points.
A survey of Mexican social and cultural history, including a brief sketch
of indigenous societies and civilizations on the eve of the Spanish Conquest, an examination of the conquest as a protracted process and of
the establishment of regionally distinct colonial societies, and an exploration of the formation and subsequent development of specific patterns of social life—of urban society
and rural hinterlands, of characteristic agrarian institutions, and of interracial and interethnic relations. Special attention paid to moments of
real or apparent rupture in the social
and political system, when these
characteristic patterns and institutions were challenged or threatened—the Wars of Independence,
the revolution, and the recent conflict and crisis in Chiapas.
History of the Andes
V57.0753 Thomson. 4 points.
This course offers an introduction to
one of the core regions of Latin America from pre-conquest to modern
times. Course themes include: Andean
regional and cultural identity; ecology
and peasant agriculture; native society
and the Inca; colonialism, nationalism
and race; global commodity production (from silver to coca) and economic
dependency; Indian and working-class
political struggles. The Peruvian novelist and ethnographer José María
Arguedas is taken as an exemplary
figure whose life, work, and death
provide a focus connecting diverse elements in the course.
History of the Caribbean
V57.0759 Ferrer. 4 points.
The Antilles and the Guianas, from
the arrival of Columbus to the present. A survey course organized
chronologically and thematically
around such topics as colonialism,
slavery and emancipation, U.S. intervention, social revolution, and economic development.
GLOBAL AND SPECIAL TOPICS
COURSES
The Search for Peace in the
Nuclear Age
V57.0813 Identical to V53.0713.
Lutzker. 2 points.
Examines the major paths that could
lead to a nuclear confrontation; the
social, ecological, and economic consequences of nuclear detonations; and
the various policies that either promote the likelihood of nuclear war or
make it a less imminent threat.
Contemporary World History
V57.0831 Berenson. 4 points.
A thematic approach to contemporary world history since the late 19th
century. The course considers the following topics, among several others:
the reasons for Europe’s unprecedented world domination in the final
third of the 19th century; responses
to Western hegemony; the world
wars in global perspective; the new
nationalism of the 20th century; the
rise of authoritarian and fascist
regimes; independence movements
and decolonization; cultural change
and the assertion of women’s rights;
the Islamic revival, and the collapse
of world communism.
Topics in Women’s History
V57.0820 Identical to V97.0820.
4 points.
Topics vary from term to term.
Topics in World History
V57.0830 Hull. 4 points.
This advanced lecture course varies
in format and content each semester.
In general, it examines different cultures comparatively over time and
space from the 15th century to the
present. Ideally it should be taken
after V57.0031.
RESEARCH SEMINARS
The research seminar is the culminating intellectual experience for the history major. Having taken the relevant
lecture and readings courses to provide historical background and context, the seminar student undertakes
the research and writing of an original research paper. Research seminars
should be taken in the senior year,
but they are open to qualified juniors.
They are small classes in which the
students present their own work and
discuss the work of the others. Permission of the director of undergraduate studies is required for admission.
An occasional nonmajor may be
admitted with permission of the
director of undergraduate studies.
EUROPEAN HISTORY
Seminar: Topics in Irish History
V57.0185 Identical to V58.0185.
Scally. 4 points.
See description under Irish Studies (58).
Seminar: The Crusades and the
Crusader Kingdom in the Middle
Ages
V57.0265 Identical to V65.0265.
Claster. 4 points.
Examines the Crusades and the Crusader Kingdom in the context of
both the western European and the
eastern Mediterranean worlds. The
European background of the crusading movement and the history of the
Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem are
explored. Emphasis is on the writings
of the crusaders themselves, of the
Near Easterners who reacted to the
Crusades, as well as the many theories proposed by modern historians to
explain the crusading phenomenon.
Seminar: Women in Medieval and
Renaissance Europe
V57.0270 Identical to V65.0270,
V97.0270. P. Johnson. 4 points.
Examines the role and status of
women in medieval and Renaissance
Europe, exploring theological and
medical attitudes toward women as
well as economic and social determinants for women’s lives. Topics
include the development of the institution of marriage; the ideal of
romantic love; women’s religious
experience; and women’s economic,
literary, and artistic contributions to
society. Balances studying women as
a group in history and examining
individual women, when possible,
through their own words.
Seminar: Topics in Early Modern
Europe
V57.0279 Identical to V65.0279.
Feros, Hsia. 4 points.
The specific subjects treated in this
seminar vary according to student
need and instructor interest.
Seminar: Topics in the
Renaissance
V57.0281 Identical to V65.0281.
Feros. 4 points.
The specific subjects treated in this
seminar vary according to student
need and instructor interest.
Seminar: The European
Enlightenment
V57.0286 Levy. 4 points.
Students examine classic texts in
Enlightenment studies as well as
interpretations of the Enlightenment
that place these texts in cultural context and larger historical perspective.
Topics include the philosophies and
the gods, the social and political sciences, ethical thought, utopian literature, and popular culture.
Seminar: Cultural History of the
French Revolution
V57.0287 Levy. 4 points.
Explores thematically and in depth
selected new sources, recent interpretations, and current debates in
French Revolutionary cultural history. It is broadly divided into Revolutionary and counterrevolutionary
ideology and culture; biography;
legacies of the French Revolution;
20th-century representations of the
French Revolution in the arts.
Seminar: Origins of World War I
V57.0288 Stehlin. 4 points.
Explores the causes and responsibility for the war. Topics include the
diplomatic crises before 1914, the
internal situation of Austria, the
assassination of the Archduke Ferdinand, and the varying interpretations
of the causes of the war.
Seminar: Origins of World War II
in Europe
V57.0289 Stehlin. 4 points.
Explores the instability of the European state system of the post-1918
era and the contributions of each
state to the outbreak of war. Topics
include the Versailles Treaty, Reparations, Nazi and Fascist diplomacy,
Western and Russian diplomacy, and
the immediate causes of the war.
Seminar: Fascism
V57.0290 Nolan. 4 points.
Fascism as a political, social, and cultural phenomenon in the 20th century. The nature and appeals of fascist
movements in individual European
countries from the First through the
Second World War, including fascist
regimes in Italy and Germany. Background readings are the center of discussion in the first half of the course;
students present short papers for
class discussion and criticism during
the second half. Attention given to
the role of leadership, economic conditions, class conflicts, ethnic
hatreds, foreign relations, and social
and cultural regimentation.
Seminar: The Russian Revolution
V57.0291 Kotsonis. 4 points.
This seminar has two objectives: (1)
an in-depth survey of the events, personalities, and interpretations of the
Russian Revolution through a close
analysis of numerous and varied
sources and (2) a workshop in the
writing of history through the preparation and criticism of short papers
and written exercises.
Seminar: Topics in Russian
History
V57.0292 Kotsonis. 4 points.
Seminar: Cultural History of
Europe, 19th and 20th Centuries
V57.0293 Judt. 4 points.
Stresses the theme of cultural
responses to a changing civilization
in the generation before World War
I. Students present reports based on
original research in fields such as literature, the arts, philosophy, science,
religion, education, and popular culture. Emphasizes research methods,
and discussions center on student
investigations.
Seminar: Western Europe and
Greece, 1700-1900
V57.0297 Fleming. 4 points.
This seminar focuses on European
philhellenism from 1700-1900.
Examines the impact of philhellenism
on the Greek and European cultural
contexts, assesses the contributions of
European philhellenism to the Greek
War of Independence, and traces the
ways in which philhellenism shaped
the development of Greece as an independent nation-state in the 19th century. Particular attention given to the
French Revolution and the Napoleonic
Wars; the so-called “Age of Revolution”; the role of the Habsburgs and
Ottomans; and the rise of the British
colonial empire.
Seminar: 19th-Century France
V57.0302 Berenson. 4 points.
Social and political history of France
from the French Revolution to the
late nineteenth century. Topics
include the French Revolution and
its legacy; the Empire; movements of
the right and the left; urbanization;
the Revolution of 1848 and the Paris
Commune; the Dreyfus Affair; colonization; and the question of nationhood, citizenship, and the emergence
of a French identity.
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171
Seminar: 20th-Century France
V57.0303 Berenson. 4 points.
The transformation of French society
since the beginning of the 20th century. Topics include nationalism,
socialism, labor conflict, economic
crisis, war and collaboration, colonialism and decolonization, student
uprising, immigration, the establishment of a presidential regime, and
regional and ethnic militancy.
Seminar: The Civil War
V57.0683 Schult. 4 points.
Each student engages in a research
project in the sources for the period
of the Civil War, concentrating on a
particular topic, biographical,
regional, or societal. Begins with a
few sessions of discussion about
developments between 1860 and 1870
and follows with emphasis on individual oral presentations and class
interchange on the selected topics.
UNITED STATES HISTORY
Seminar: Religion and Society in
America
V57.0668 Wosh. 4 points.
Discusses the relationship between
religion and American culture from
the 1880s through the present. Topics include the changing nature of
African American religious culture
after the Civil War; the growth and
diversity of immigrant Catholicism;
the Social Gospel movement and the
reaction of mainline Protestants to
immigration and industrialization;
the rise of fundamentalism and the
resurgence of the religious right; the
emergence of non-Christian religious
traditions in the United States.
Seminar: The Jacksonian Era
V57.0673 Schult. 4 points.
American society in the Jacksonian
era—1820s to 1848—confronted
many dynamic challenges to the perceived social and economic order, as
well as the political culture of the
early Republic. The seminar explores
ways of approaching research analysis
of the era, focusing on the social, cultural, or political movements such as
its new reform efforts, its utopian
communities, its new religious
impulses, its varied politics, its disorders and dislocations is response to
urbanization, immigration, and
industrialization. After preliminary
readings and discussions the seminar
features the individual research
investigations of the students.
Seminar: Constructions of Race in
U.S. History
V57.0680 Hodes. 4 points.
Explores the ideas of race and how
racial classifications have changed
over time and across regions and cultures in the United States. Themes
include language, color, law, science,
slavery, mixed ancestries, and white
identity. Focus on the 19th century,
with attention to colonial origins,
the 20th century, and the modern day.
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•
HISTORY
Seminar: Ideology and Social
Change in American History
V57.0684 Prerequisite: V57.0010 or
the equivalent. Mattingly. 4 points.
Explores classical arguments in
American history concerning social
behavior. Central themes: the power
of cultural conditioning, the role of
schooling and other acculturating
institutions, the uses of “uplifting”
reform and organizational benevolence,
and the intervention of professional
experts into social policymaking. Special attention to the role of ethnic and
racial leaders, proponents of success
and socialization, critical investigations of family and femininity, and
analysis of distinctive generational
responses to these and related issues.
Seminar: The New Deal
V57.0686 Katz. 4 points.
Explores the historical issues of the
Great Depression and the New Deal
years, 1933-1941, by discussing several relevant works on this period.
Students choose a research project,
which they report on orally and in a
seminar paper.
Seminar: The United States
Since 1945
V57.0687 4 points.
The major developments in American society and foreign affairs in the
past 40 years. Beginning with the
origins of the cold war, considers
American-Russian relations and the
spread of the cold war to Asia, culminating in the Vietnam War. In
domestic affairs special attention is
given to social and political developments, including the civil rights
movement, reform (the Fair Deal
and the War on Poverty), civil liberties, and the women’s liberation
movement.
Seminar: Urban America
V57.0695 Bender. 4 points.
Concentrates on a topic in urban history. Students discuss readings on the
topic and then write substantial
papers on a specific aspect of the
topic that interests them. Completed
student papers are discussed in class.
Special attention to methods of historical research and interpretation.
Seminar: History of African
Americans
V57.0696 Identical to V11.0696.
Kelley, Krauthamer, Sammons. 4 points.
Traces the evolution of black culture
from the colonial era to the present.
Special attention to the development
of American slavery, the free black
community, and the Civil War. Patterns of racism in the South and
urbanization in the North after the
war are examined. Concludes with a
consideration of the civil rights
movement and black nationalism.
Seminar: Sport and Film in
American History
V57.0698 Sammons. 4 points.
This course investigates how a visual
medium (film), subject to the conventions of drama and fiction and a
popular activity/institution (sport),
often associated with frivolity, violence, and puerility, might be used as
serious vehicles for conceptualizing
and analyzing the past.
HISTORY OF ASIA, AFRICA, AND
LATIN AMERICA
Seminar: Colonialism, Imperialism, and Nationalism in the
Middle East
V57.0541 Identical to V77.0677.
Lockman. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Seminar in Chinese History
V57.0552 Identical to V33.0552.
Karl, Waley-Cohen, M. Young. 4 points.
Specific topics include China and the
Global Economy, 1492-1842; China
and Christianity; Culture and Politics
in 18th-Century China; Republican
Shanghai; Modern Chinese Intellectual History; Frontiers of China; Politics and Culture of the 1950s;
Nationalism in Asia; The Cultural
Revolution.
Seminar: Modern Africa
V57.0584 Hull. 4 points.
This advanced seminar covers the
period since 1960 with an emphasis
on the last two decades. It analyzes a
number of topics including religious
fundamentalism and terrorism, governance, economic development,
urbanization, environmental protec-
tion, gender and ethnic relations,
and disease, especially AIDS and
malaria. Each topic is discussed
rather broadly while individual students in their own research have an
opportunity to focus more narrowly
on an aspect of a topic as it applies to
a specific country or region.
Seminar: Ancient Africa
V57.0597 Hull. 4 points.
This research seminar attempts to
examine critically a number of
important cities, towns, and states
that flourished before the period of
external, mainly European, control.
We explore the key reasons for their
emergence, their dynamism, and
their demise. In the process, we consider such factors as governance, commerce, the arts and architecture,
social organization, and religion. The
period covered extends from the New
Kingdom in Egypt (1550 B.C.E.) to
the forest kingdoms of West Africa
on the eve of the Atlantic slave trade
in the mid-15th century.
Seminar: Modern Central Asia
V57.0700 Identical to V77.0700.
4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Seminar: The Vietnam War
V57.0701 M. Young. 4 points.
Investigates the history of 30 years of
war (1945-1975) in Indochina. Students research, discuss, and write
about aspects of the war, with
emphasis on the Vietnamese, Laotians, Cambodians, French, and
Americans actually in Indochina.
The focus is on Vietnam and the
events that transpired there. Uses
Vietnamese and American sources.
Seminar: Japan and World War II
in Asia
V57.0710 Identical to V33.0710.
L. Young. 4 points.
Takes up a watershed event in Japanese history, the greatest single preoccupation of Japanese historians. The
war is dealt with in two senses: its
meaning for Japan’s international
history and its impact on the domestic landscape. Readings are drawn
from both primary and secondary
sources so that interpretive controversies as well as texts may be discussed. Thematically, the course
divides into sections: (1) the great
debates over Japanese fascism and
ultranationalism; (2) the China War;
(3) the Pacific War; (4) the Co-Pros-
perity Sphere; (5) the atom bomb,
surrender, and occupation; and (6)
issues of public memory and war
responsibility.
Seminar: Japanese Modern in
Film and Literature
V57.0712 Identical to V33.0612.
L. Young. 4 points.
Explores categories and meanings of
“the modern” as they emerge in the
film and literature of early 20th-century Japan, when the central apparatuses of Japanese modernity—the
modernizing reforms of the nationstate and the formations of industrial
capitalism—took root. A series of
war booms stimulated rapid urban
growth nationwide and the emergence of a new mass culture and
mass society in Japan’s burgeoning
cities. These developments and their
significance for modern life became a
central preoccupation of writers, critics, and artists. Course examines how
these intellectuals understood the
changes happening around them.
Seminar: Conquest and the
Origins of Colonialism in Latin
America and the Caribbean
V57.0757 Thomson. 4 points.
How did colonizing European and
colonized American peoples perceive
each other, respond to unprecedented
historical conditions, and reshape
their worlds in the early modern era?
What confluence of economic, political, and spiritual forces led to European domination in the New World?
What were the common and distinctive features of the conquest in the
Caribbean, Mexico, the Andes,
Brazil, and New World frontier settings? These questions are addressed
through a range of historical sources
and contemporary works that cast
light on the past and reflect postconquest thought about race, colonialism, and modernity.
Seminar: Latin America and the
Caribbean
V57.0799 Ferrer, Grandin, Thomson.
4 points.
Seminars are organized around broad
themes in Latin American and
Caribbean history. Recent topics
have included African Slavery in
Latin America and the Caribbean;
Haiti and Cuba: Connections and
Comparisons; the Cold War in Latin
America, and Memory and Violence
in Latin America. Students choose a
research topic related to the semester’s theme, conduct primary source
research in area libraries, and produce a final, original research paper.
GLOBAL AND SPECIAL TOPICS
SEMINARS
Colonialism and Decolonization
V57.0569 Identical to V11.0569.
Goswami. 4 points.
Drawing on canonical works produced in the interdisciplinary context of “colonial studies,” this course
addresses the history of colonialism
since the late 18th century. Our discussions focus on the shifting forms
and strategies of colonial domination
for the remaking of 19th- and 20thcentury worlds, the relationship
between colonial and metropolitan
politics, the meaning of “colonial
modernity,” and anticolonial nationalism. Historical readings draw on
examples of British, French, Dutch,
and Japanese colonialism in South
Asia, Africa, South East Asia, and
East Asia.
American History in
Transnational Perspective
V57.0667 Bender. 4 points.
This seminar is designed to explore
the ways of narrating the history of
the United States that are not wholly
contained within the territory of the
United States. It seeks to identify
histories larger than the U.S. within
which the history of America is
embedded and entangled, with the
aim of rethinking the basic narrative
of American history. Themes range
from immigration and economics to
culture and politics in their global
and transnational aspects. The course
focuses on readings and discussion.
Students should have taken at least
one college-level course in American
history.
REQUIRED COURSE FOR
HISTORY MAJORS
Workshop in History
V57.0900 4 points.
At least one workshop is required for
the major, usually taken in the junior
year and before an advanced seminar.
Broadly speaking, this is a course in
the historian’s craft and it gives students an opportunity to learn about
the discipline of history. The goal is
not to impart a specific body of historical knowledge but to give students an understanding of the skills
and methodologies of the professional historian. Students learn how to
HISTORY
•
173
pose researchable questions, how to
do the detective work necessary to
gather evidence, how to analyze varieties of evidence, and how to present
their findings before an audience of
their peers. Students will learn how
to critique historical arguments and
interpretations, as well as to create
their own. Recent topics have included Spain and America, 1898-1940;
Families and the Civil War; New
York City, 1870-1930; Decoding
the Middle Ages; Travel and Travelers in American History; and Material Culture.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Independent Study
V57.0997, 0998 Prerequisites: junior
or senior standing and permission of the
instructor and the director of undergraduate studies. Students may not take more
than one independent study course per
term. No more than two may count
toward the major. Instructors are limited
to two independent study students per
term. 2 or 4 points per term.
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
Internship
V57.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. Open only to junior and senior history
majors. 4 points per term.
Enables advanced and qualified
students to work on historical projects for credit for up to 12 hours per
week in approved agencies or archival
centers.
CROSSLISTED COURSES
The following are designated related
courses offered in other departments
and generally crosslisted with History.
Modern Jewish History
V57.0099 Identical to V78.0103.
Engel. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Renaissance 2000
V57.0124 Identical to V59.5161.
4 points.
See description under Italian (59).
Russia and the Middle East in
Modern Times
V57.0131 Identical to V77.0675.
4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
History of Ancient Greece
V57.0200 Identical to V27.0242.
Peachin. 4 points.
See description under Classics (27).
History of the Roman Republic
V57.0205 Identical to V27.0267.
Peachin. 4 points.
See description under Classics (27).
History of the Roman Empire
V57.0206 Identical to V27.0278.
Peachin. 4 points.
See description under Classics (27).
History of the South Asian
Diaspora
V57.0326 Identical to V15.0326.
Muhkerjea. 4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
The History of Ancient Egypt,
3200-50 B.C.
V57.0506 Identical to V77.0611.
Goelet. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Islam and the West
V57.0520 Identical to V77.0694.
4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
The Emergence of the Modern
Middle East
V57.0531 Identical to V77.0690.
Haj, Lockman. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Palestine, Zionism, Israel
V57.0532 Identical to V77.0697.
Lockman. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
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•
HISTORY
The Land of Israel Through
the Ages
V57.0540 Identical to V78.0141 and
V90.0609. Schiffman. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Seminar: Colonialism,
Imperialism, and Nationalism in
the Middle East
V57.0541 Identical to V77.0677.
Haj. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Seminar: Topics in Middle
Eastern History
V57.0550 Identical to V77.0688.
Husain. 4 points.
See description under Middle Eastern
Studies (77).
Introduction to the Asian/Pacific
American Experience
V57.0626 Identical to V15.0010. Siu.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Race, Class, and Metropolitan
Transformation
V57.0656 Identical to V15.0601,
V99.0345. 4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
The Holocaust: The Third Reich
and the Jews
V57.0808 Identical to V78.0685.
4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Certain 1000-level courses in the
Graduate School of Arts and Science
are open to qualified undergraduates
each semester, and qualified undergraduates are encouraged to enroll in
those that fit the needs of their program. Permission of the director of
undergraduate studies is required.
PROGRAM IN
International Relations (52)
Major
7 1 5 B R O A D WA Y, 4 T H F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y, 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 8 0 6 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 5 0 0
CODIRECTORS:
Professor Bueno de
Mesquita
Assistant Professor Clark
T
he Program in International Relations seeks to provide students with an understanding of the global system’s past, the tools to function effectively in the present,
and the ability to foresee and respond to developments. The program recognizes and
critically engages the changing nature of the contemporary political and economic environment and seeks to lay an interdisciplinary basis for understanding these changes. It provides
students with an opportunity to study the complex web of transnational politics in an indepth, interdisciplinary fashion. The breadth of courses is designed to match the breadth of
knowledge and skills that the field requires. Fluency in a foreign language and a semester
of study abroad at a site where that language is spoken are required of all majors to help
ensure that they acquire a deeper understanding of a country’s culture and institutions.
Majors are also encouraged, though not required, to take advantage of the many internship
opportunities that are available in New York City to students of international relations.
Faculty
Professors:
Bueno de Mesquita, Denoon, Downs,
Hsuing
Associate Professor:
Gilligan
Assistant Professors:
Clark, Satyanath
Program
The requirements of the international
relations major are those of an honors
major, and it is expected that students will complete an honors thesis
in their senior year. Because it is an
honors major, the number of students
who can be admitted to it is limited
to 20 to 25 per year. Interested students therefore need to submit a formal application, between the end of
their freshman year and October 15
of their sophomore year. Criteria for
admission include a strong academic
record at NYU (GPA of 3.5 or better); progress toward or completion of
the foreign language requirement;
and demonstrated commitment to
the field. By the time of application,
students should also have finished at
least two of the required core courses.
All majors must complete a set of
classes in seven areas. They must
complete four core courses, three
courses on the international relations
environment, and an additional international relations elective. In addition, students must demonstrate
competence in a foreign language,
take two courses in a regional specialization, and complete a semester in a
study abroad program. Finally, students must complete the two-course
senior honors sequence. Students are
also encouraged, but not required, to
take an internship, whether for academic credit or not for credit, at one of
the many international institutions or
agencies located in New York City.
They can pursue internship possibilities through the Department of Politics, the Program in Metropolitan
Studies, and the NYU Office of
Career Services.
CORE
Economic Principles I
V31.0001 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
International Politics
V53.0700 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Economic Principles II
V31.0002 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
Doing Political Science
V53.0800 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Courses
Majors must complete four core
courses, including V31.0001,
V31.0002, and V53.0700.
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS
•
175
Introductory Statistics
(Economics)
V31.0018 6 points.
See description under Economics (31).
Statistics for Social Research
(Sociology)
V93.0302 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
THE INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS ENVIRONMENT
Majors must complete three of the
following courses:
International Economics
V31.0238 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
National Security
V53.0712 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Diplomacy and Negotiation
V53.0720 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
International Organization
V53.0730 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
War, Peace, and World Order
V53.0741 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
International Political Economy
V53.0775 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
The Search for Peace in the
Nuclear Age
V57.0813 4 points.
See description under History (53).
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•
INTERNATIONAL
INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
ELECTIVE
The one required 4-point course in
this area can be chosen from the
remaining courses in the International Relations Environment, above, or
from offerings in a variety of disciplines, including anthropology,
economics, history, politics, and sociology, as well as from area studies
and foreign-language programs. It
must be approved in advance by a
director of the program.
FOREIGN LANGUAGE
Students may satisfy this requirement by completing two courses
beyond the intermediate level or by
demonstrating comparable proficiency on a test, administered by the relevant CAS language program. The
language should in most cases be
related to the regional specialization
and the study abroad site (but not,
for example, if the site is London).
REGIONAL SPECIALIZATION
Majors must complete two 4-point
courses focusing on a particular
world region. These courses should
normally be taken during the term
abroad. Whether taken at NYU or
abroad, both courses must be
approved in advance by a director of
the program.
STUDY ABROAD
Students spend a semester, usually in
the junior year, at one of the six
NYU programs abroad or at one of
the 18 universities around the world
with which NYU has an exchange
agreement. Permission to study at
any other site must be petitioned in
advance in the Office of the Associate
RELATIONS
Dean for Students, a process that presupposes the approval of a program
director.
SENIOR HONORS
In effect, the major constitutes an
honors track, and students must
complete the requirements for
departmental honors by taking the
senior seminar and writing a thesis.
International Relations Senior
Seminar
V52.0990 Prerequisite: permission of a
director of the international relations
major.
This course is the first half of the
international relations major’s twosemester capstone experience. It is
designed to equip students with the
skills required to write an excellent
international relations thesis
(V52.0991) in the spring semester.
The class is meant to be a bridge
between the major’s required class in
research methods and the substantive
classes in the major. Students learn
how to develop explanations for
international phenomena, derive
testable hypotheses, and develop
research designs capable of testing
them.
International Relations Senior
Thesis
V52.0991 Prerequisite: permission of a
director of the international relations
major.
One term of individual research culminating in the production of a
senior thesis of the student’s own
choice under the supervision of an
appropriate member of the faculty.
PROGRAM IN
Irish Studies (58)
Minor
G L U C K S M A N I R E L A N D H O U S E , O N E WA S H I N G T O N M E W S , N E W Y O R K , N Y
10003-6691. (212) 998-3950.
DIRECTOR:
Professor Scally
Faculty
Program
I
reland and its diaspora present an extraordinarily significant and rewarding area of
intellectual inquiry. The study of Irish society and culture provides students with an
understanding of Ireland’s historical experience—its colonial past; its contribution to
literature, both medieval and modern; its far-reaching effect in the modern world through
its diaspora; and its dual language tradition and rival national narratives. The Irish studies
minor at NYU offers an interdisciplinary program providing students with the opportunity to study and pursue directed research in the history and culture of Ireland and Irish
America, exploring such areas as literature, history, drama, politics, art, cinema studies,
music, and the Irish language. A faculty of internationally renowned scholars is supplemented by the regular presence of prominent visiting professors. In addition to the program at Washington Square, NYU in Dublin gives students the opportunity to study in
Ireland during the summer.
Through the generosity of Lewis L. and Loretta Brennan Glucksman, two landmark
houses at Numbers One and Two Washington Mews were renovated to serve as the home
for Ireland House. Since its official opening in 1993, Glucksman Ireland House has become
one of the most vibrant centers of Irish and Irish American arts and learning in North America. It offers a lively array of programs that are free to students, including evening courses,
public lectures, conferences, films, exhibits, and readings.
Professors:
Donoghue, Lee, Scally
Adjunct Assistant Professors:
Almeida, Reilly
Assistant Professors:
Casey, Waters
Visiting Professors:
McKenna, Moloney
MINOR
Courses must be chosen from at least
two areas, and one course in the Irish
language may count toward the
minor. (Independent study courses are
also available. Graduate courses are open
to undergraduates with permission.)
Introduction to Celtic Music
V58.0152 Identical to V71.0151.
4 points.
This course provides a comprehensive
introduction to the traditional and
contemporary music of the Celtic
areas of Western Europe—Ireland,
Scotland, Wales, Brittany, and Galicia. Recordings and live performances present the extraordinary
range of singing styles and the musical instruments employed in each
Four courses to be chosen from the
list of Irish studies course offerings.
Courses
Atlantic Migrations, 1500-1945
V58.0149 Identical to V57.0149.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Irish Language Lecturer:
Ó Cearúil
IRISH
STUDIES
•
177
culture, including harps, bagpipes
and a variety of other wind, free reed,
keyboard and stringed instruments.
Forms and musical styles are explored
in depth along with a study of their
origin, evolution, and cultural links.
The Irish and New York
V58.0180 Identical to V57.0180 and
V99.0325. 4 points.
This course explores the symbiotic
relationship between New York City
and the Irish from the 18th through
the 20th centuries, as well as the
impact of political, social, and cultural changes in Ireland and America on
a transnational population. Factors
beyond race and language, which
help define and preserve ethnic group
identity, as well as the city’s role in
the creation of a pseudo-Irish identity
that is disseminated on both sides of
the Atlantic, are also explored. Readings are broadly drawn from immigration, urban, and social history. Primary documents, literature, and film
are also used as texts.
Topics in Irish History
V58.0181 Identical to V57.0181.
4 points.
The emphasis of this course varies by
semester and is designed to allow
flexibility in course offerings from
visiting scholars and specialists in
particular fields. Past examinations
have included imagery and ideology
of Irish nationalism, Irish American
popular folk culture, and the Irish in
America.
History of Modern Ireland, 15801800
V58.0182 Identical to V57.0182.
4 points.
Examines the English conquest of
Ireland from the reign of Elizabeth I
to the last meeting of the Irish Parliament. Key themes include the
plantation of Ireland with settlers
from England, Scotland, and Wales,
the decline of the Gaelic political
order and culture, the religious reformation and Counter Reformation,
Ireland as a site of English and European wars, the imposition of a penal
code, and the vain attempt to rebel
against British rule in the late 18th
century resulting in the Act of
Union, which disestablished the Irish
Parliament in Dublin.
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•
IRISH
STUDIES
History of Modern Ireland,
1800-1922
V58.0183 Identical to V57.0183.
4 points.
Examines the period from the Act of
Union between Great Britain and
Ireland to the achievement of partial
independence in 1922. Topics covered include the Union and its aftermath; the growth of nationalism in
19th-century Ireland; the Great
Famine of 1845-1850 and its longterm economic, social, and political
consequences; the shaping of modern
Ireland; Fenianism and the Land
War; the Irish cultural revival; the
policy of Home Rule and Unionist
reaction; the 1916 Rising; and the
War of Independence.
History of Modern Ireland, 1922Present
V58.0184 Identical to V57.0184.
4 points.
The focus of this course is the political
history of the two jurisdictions within
the island of Ireland founded upon the
partition settlement of 1920-1922.
An era of revolution and bitter civil
and confessional conflict temporarily
gave way to a period of separate statebuilding projects according to different political, cultural, and economic
priorities and therefore to divergent
historical experiences. Division has
characterized the history of the island
in the 20th century and attempts to
negotiate those fractures characterize
the political agenda, a process ongoing in the present moment.
Seminar in Irish History
V58.0185 Identical to V57.0185.
4 points.
Intensive examination of specific
areas of Irish history with an emphasis on critical reading and individual
research projects. Past themes
include the development and modernization of the Republic of Ireland
with particular consideration of the
economy; the Great Famine of 18451851, which was an immediate and
long-term catastrophe for the Irish
people but which was also the catalyst for substantial changes—positive
and negative—in Irish society and
culture; and the cinematic representations of Irish Americans.
Irish and Jewish Migrations to
America
V58.0186 Identical to V57.0186 and
V78.0686. 4 points.
See description under History (57).
The Irish in America
V58.0187 Identical to V57.0187.
4 points.
This course considers the factors
affecting emigration from Ireland;
examines the impact of the Irish on
the development of the United States
since the colonial period, particularly
on its cities; and studies the influence of Irish Americans on modern
Irish history. A variety of texts are
used, including scholarly articles, literary fiction, and film (fiction and
documentary).
Myths and Cultures of the
Ancient Celts
V58.0307 Identical to V41.0307 and
V65.0761. 4 points.
Traces the origins of the Celts in Iron
Age Europe and their migrations to
Great Britain and Ireland, where
their languages and culture survive
even today. In myths and tales from
early Ireland and Wales, in images of
ancient objects and buildings, and in
the writings of Greek and Roman
historians, the course examines the
world of one of Europe’s first peoples—their sacred kings, their heroic
warriors, their reverence for the
power of poetic utterance.
Medieval Ireland
V58.0308 Identical to V41.0308 and
V57.0308. 4 points.
This interdisciplinary course explores
medieval Ireland from the perspectives of literature, history, and material culture. The course is organized
thematically, focusing on the following five subjects: land and landscape;
the warrior culture; religious propaganda; history and cultural identity;
and gender roles. The role of early
Irish heroic saga is particularly examined, as is its relation to medieval
Irish society and its legal texts, religious tracts, and warrior ethos.
Cinema in Contemporary Ireland
V58.0503 Identical to V30.0503.
4 points.
An examination of recent developments in Irish cinema focusing on
the importance of independent film
in contemporary Irish culture. Considers the relationship between word
and image, narrative and spectacle,
in the light of the complex interaction between visual culture and the
powerful literary tradition in Ireland.
British and Irish Politics
V58.0514 Identical to V53.0514 and
V42.0514. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Contemporary Irish Politics and
Society
V58.0515 Identical to V42.0515.
4 points.
An examination of the politics of
contemporary Ireland, north and
south. The course focuses on political, governmental, and constitutional
developments in the Republic of Ireland since independence and discusses the causes of conflict and the
prospect of resolution in Northern
Ireland.
William Butler Yeats, Lady Gregory,
and the fledgling Abbey Theatre.
Playwrights covered include John
Millington Synge, Sean O’Casey,
Samuel Beckett, Brendan Behan,
Brian Friel, Tom Murphy, Frank
McGuinness, and Anne Devlin.
Issues of Irish identity, history, and
postcoloniality are engaged alongside
an appreciation of the emotional texture, poetic achievements, and theatrical innovations that characterize
this body of dramatic work.
Independent Study
V58.0998 Prerequisite: permission of the
director of undergraduate studies is
required. 2 or 4 points per term.
Independent study with an Irish
studies faculty member.
The Irish Renaissance
V58.0621 Identical to V41.0621.
4 points.
See description under English (41).
BASIC LANGUAGE COURSES
IN IRISH
Irish American Literature
V58.0622 Identical to V41.0622.
4 points.
The course examines Irish American
literature from the 19th century to
the present, considering the literary
responses of generations of Irish
immigrants as they strove to understand and contribute to the American experience. The works of writers
such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Eugene
O’Neill, Flannery O’Connor, John
O’Hara, and William Kennedy are
explored, as are the connections
between ethnic and literary cultures.
The courses focus on learning Irish
(sometimes referred to as Gaelic) as
it is spoken in the Irish-speaking
regions of Ireland, known as the
Gaeltacht. The courses utilize conversation and song, and aim to promote fluency in spoken Irish as well
as proficiency in reading and writing. Students progress to conversation, translations, compositions, and
readings from contemporary Irish literature. They also participate in
Irish-speaking events at Glucksman
Ireland House. The Irish language fulfills the MAP language requirement.
Colloquium: James Joyce
V58.0625 Identical to V41.0625.
4 points.
See description under English (41).
Elementary Irish I
V58.0100 Identical to V42.0100.
Open to students with no previous training in Irish. 4 points.
This course introduces students to
the rudiments of the Irish language,
including phonemes and pronunciation, syntactical structure, and verbal
conjugations. In addition, a history
of the language is provided, as well
as a general introduction to Irish culture, including discussions of family
and place names. Students are
encouraged to begin speaking with
basic sentence structures.
Modern Irish Art
V58.0650 4 points.
This introductory course traces
painting and other visual art forms
from impressionism and symbolism
to social realism, expressionism, surrealism, modernism, and postmodernist conceptual and installation art.
Both classroom lectures and visits to
examine Irish art in New York collections are integral to the course.
Irish Dramatists
V58.0700 Identical to H28.0603,
V30.0700, and V41.0700. 4 points.
A study of the rich dramatic tradition of Ireland since the days of
Elementary Irish II
V58.0101 Identical to V42.0101.
Continuation of V58.0100 or assignment by placement examination or department permission. 4 points.
This course builds on the grammatical lessons of Elementary Irish I and
expands into more complex verbal
conjugations while concentrating on
idiomatic expressions. The accumulation of vocabulary is stressed and
students are introduced to basic literature in Irish while developing
beginning conversational fluency.
Intermediate Irish I
V58.0102 Identical to V42.0102.
Prerequisite: V58.0101 or assignment by
placement examination or department permission. 4 points.
For the more advanced student of
Irish, this course focuses on improving conversational fluency and on
expanding vocabulary through reading more complex literature in Irish.
Intermediate Irish II
V58.0103 Identical to V42.0103.
Continuation of V58.0102 or assignment by placement examination or department permission. 4 points.
The focus of this course is on conversational fluency, reading complex literature in Irish, and writing in the
Irish language, further encouraging
students to strengthen their pronunciation and command of spoken
Irish.
NYU IN DUBLIN
The focus of NYU’s summer program in Dublin is contemporary Ireland and its culture. The program is
centered at Trinity College, Ireland’s
oldest university, situated in the heart
of Dublin, where students reside and
take classes. Courses are open to
NYU and non-NYU students, both
graduate and undergraduate, and
include Irish literature, history, politics, visual arts, and the Irish language. The academic program is
complemented by a series of field
trips and cultural and social activities
designed to broaden students’ knowledge of Ireland. Among the typical
evening activities are outings to the
theatre, poetry readings, screenings at
the new Irish Film Center, and traditional music sessions. Weekend
excursions include Donegal and Galway. See our Web site: www.nyu.edu/
fas/summer/dublin/index.html.
IRISH
STUDIES
•
179
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Italian Studies (59)
CASA ITALIANA ZERILLI-MARIMÒ, 24 WEST 12TH STREET, NEW YORK, NY 10011-8697. (212) 998-8730.
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Freccero
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Ben-Ghiat
DIRECTOR, ITALIAN
LANGUAGE PROGRAM:
Chiara Ferrari
Faculty
F
rom early history through the present day, Italy has played a major role in the shaping of Western civilization. The study of Italian literature and culture permits a broad
humanistic investigation of this heritage, while Italian language instruction develops
a practical skill useful for careers in international business, diplomacy, and the arts. As a
double major, Italian is an excellent complement to studies in other areas including economics, political science, law, history, comparative literature, music, art, and drama.
The Department of Italian at New York University is one of the country’s leading
centers for Italian studies, offering both undergraduate and graduate degrees. A faculty of
internationally renowned scholars is supplemented by the regular presence of prominent
visiting professors from Italy. The department also sponsors a wide range of cultural and
intellectual activities (e.g., lectures, symposia, concerts) in which undergraduates are
encouraged to participate.
Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò: The Department of Italian Studies is located in the
Casa Italiana Zerilli-Marimò at 24 West 12th Street. Once the residence of General Winfield
Scott, it is a national historic landmark. Donated to NYU by the Baroness Mariuccia
Zerilli-Marimò in memory of her husband, the late Baron Guido Zerilli-Marimò, the Casa
Italiana is now a widely recognized center for Italian cultural and social activities.
NYU in Florence at Villa La Pietra: Students of Italian have the opportunity to
study in Florence at Villa La Pietra as part of their undergraduate experience. La Pietra is
the European center for NYU students studying abroad. The former estate of Sir Harold
Acton, La Pietra is a magnificent 57-acre estate overlooking downtown Florence. The estate
includes 15th-century villas, an extensive Renaissance painting and sculpture collection,
and authentically restored Tuscan gardens. Students may study Italian language, culture,
and literature.
Professors:
Freccero
Assistant Professor:
Ardizzone
Language Lecturer:
Anderson
Associate Professors:
Ben-Ghiat, Erspamer
Adjunct Professor:
Albertini
Lettore, Italian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs:
Pasqui
Visiting Professor:
Cavarero
180
•
ITALIAN
STUDIES
Programs
Courses
MAJOR
Satisfactory knowledge of Italian is a
prerequisite for majoring in Italian.
This is normally interpreted as the
completion of V59.0030 with the
grade of C or better. While courses
taken toward completion of the
major may be taught in English or
Italian, Italian majors are required,
in the event of the former, to do the
work in Italian. Transfer students
must complete at least five of the
nine courses required for the Italian
major while in residence at New
York University. In addition, the
director of undergraduate studies
may approve courses taken at a program of study in Italy to count
toward the major. All prospective
majors should contact a department
adviser prior to registration.
Note: Internships do not count
toward the Italian major.
Programs of Study: Qualified
students may choose one of four programs of study. They may concentrate on Italian language and literature, Italian language and civilization, Romance languages, or Italian
and linguistics.
1. Italian language and literature: This plan of study normally
consists of (a) two advanced language
courses to be chosen from V59.0101,
V59.0103, V59.0105, or V59.0109;
(b) two survey courses, V59.0115
and V59.0116; (c) five advanced literature courses; and (d) one civilization course to be chosen from
V59.0160 through V59.0173.
Note: V59.0115 or V59.0116
must be taken before any advanced
literature courses taught in Italian.
2. Italian language and civilization: This plan of study normally
consists of (a) two advanced language
courses to be chosen from V59.0101,
V59.0103, V59.0105, or V59.0109;
(b) four civilization courses to be
chosen from V59.0160 through
V59.0173; (c) one additional Italian
civilization course with the approval
of the director of undergraduate
studies, chosen from the courses
offered by another department, such
as history, medieval and Renaissance
studies, music, politics, or Italian
graduate courses open to seniors (for
general requirements, please see
under “Graduate Courses Open to
Undergraduates”); (d) one survey
course: V59.0115 or V59.0116; and
(e) one advanced literature course.
Note: V59.0115 or V59.0116
must be taken before any advanced
literature course taught in Italian.
3. Romance languages: Nine
courses distributed between two languages—a combination of either
Italian-French, Italian-Spanish, or
Spanish-French. When taken with
Italian, the major consists of (a) one
conversation course in each of the
two languages: V59.0101 or
V59.0109, and one of the following:
V45.0101, V45.0102, or V95.0101;
(b) one composition course in each of
the two languages: V59.0103 or
V59.0105, and one of the following:
V45.0105, V45.0106, or V95.0106;
(c) one masterpieces of literature
course in each of the two languages:
V59.0115 or V59.0116, and one of
the following: V45.0115, V95.0811,
or V95.0815, or one civilization
course in each of the two languages:
V59.0160 through V59.0173, and
one of the following: V45.0163,
V45.0164, V95.0762, or V95.0261;
and (d) three upper-level language or
literature courses to be divided
between the two languages.
Note: V59.0115 or V59.0116
must be taken before any advanced
literature courses taught in Italian.
4. Italian and linguistics: Eight
courses beyond V59.0030 and
V61.0001, respectively. This plan of
study normally consists of the following courses in Italian and linguistics: (a) two advanced language
courses to be chosen from V59.0101,
V59.0103, V59.0105, or V59.0109;
(b) two advanced courses in either
literature or civilization, to be determined in consultation with the
director of undergraduate studies;
and (c) one course (beyond
V61.0001) in each of the following
four areas in linguistics:
phonetics/phonology, syntax, historical linguistics, and sociolinguistics.
Note: V59.0115 or V59.0116
must be taken before any advanced
literature course taught in Italian.
Placement in Italian language
courses: The placement in Italian
language courses is explained under
“Placement Examinations” in the
Academic Policies section of this
bulletin.
Fulfillment of the Morse Academic Plan (MAP) language
requirement: The language requirement in Italian may be fulfilled
either by two 6-point intensive
courses (V59.0010 and V59.0020)
for a total of 12 points, or by the
extensive sequence of four 4-point
courses (V59.0001, V59.0002,
V59.0011, and V59.0012) for a total
of 16 points. With departmental
approval, a student may follow a
plan of study combining two 4-point
courses with one 6-point course
(V59.0001, V59.0002, and
V59.0020; V59.0010 and
V59.0011, V59.0012) for a total of
14 points. All students planning to
study in Italy or continue their study
of Italian beyond the MAP requirements are strongly advised to take
V59.0010 and V59.0020 since this
permits completion of the language
requirement in two semesters.
MINOR
All students who wish to minor in
Italian must contact the department
and consult a department adviser
prior to any registration.
1. Minor in Italian studies:
Four courses beyond the advanced
level (V59.0030). These courses shall
consist of (a) two language courses
(V59.0101, V59.0103, V59.0105, or
V59.0109) and (b) two courses in
either literature or civilization to be
chosen after consultation with the
director of undergraduate studies.
Note: V59.0115 or V59.0116
must be taken before any advanced
literature course taught in Italian.
2. Literature in translation: See
under Literature in Translation.
Note: Internships do not count
toward the minor. The director of
undergraduate studies may approve a
maximum of two courses taken at a
program of study in Italy to count
toward the minor.
ITALIAN
STUDIES
•
181
INTRODUCTORY LANGUAGE
COURSES
ADVANCED LANGUAGE
COURSES
INTRODUCTORY LITERATURE COURSES
INTENSIVE SEQUENCE
Advanced Review of Modern
Italian
V59.0030 Prerequisite: V59.00110012, V59.0020, or permission of the
instructor. This course is a prerequisite for
advanced courses in language, literature,
and civilization. 4 points.
Intensive review of Italian grammar
through written and oral exercises,
conversations, compositions, translation, and readings from contemporary Italian literature.
Survey of Medieval and
Renaissance Literature
V59.0115 Formerly Masterpieces in
Italian Literature I. Prerequisite:
V59.0030 or permission of the instructor.
Identical to V65.0115. 4 points.
Introductory-level literature course
that, through a close reading of
authors such as Dante, Boccaccio,
Petrarch, Machiavelli, and Ariosto,
focuses on how to understand a literary text in Italian. Discusses the history of Italian literature from its origins to the 16th century.
Intensive Elementary Italian
V59.0010 Open to students with no
previous training in Italian and to others
on assignment by placement test. Completes the equivalent of Elementary Italian I and II in one semester. 6 points.
Intensive Intermediate Italian
V59.0020 Prerequisite: V59.0010,
V59.0001-0002, or assignment by
placement test. Completes the equivalent of
Intermediate Italian I and II in one
semester. 6 points.
EXTENSIVE SEQUENCE
Elementary Italian I
V59.0001 Open to students with no
previous training in Italian and to others
on assignment by placement test. Not
equivalent to V59.0010. Only by combining V59.0001 with V59.0002 can
a student complete the equivalent of
V59.0010 and then continue on to the
intermediate level. 4 points.
Elementary Italian II
V59.0002 Prerequisite: V59.0001 or
assignment by placement test. Continuation of V59.0001. In order to continue
on to the intermediate level, a student
must complete both V59.0001 and
V59.0002. This sequence is equivalent to
V59.0010. 4 points.
Intermediate Italian I
V59.0011 Prerequisite: V59.00010002, V59.0010, or assignment by
placement test. Not equivalent to
V59.0020. Only by combining
V59.0011 with V59.0012 can a student complete the equivalent of
V59.0020 and then continue on to the
postintermediate level. 4 points.
Intermediate Italian II
V59.0012 Prerequisite: V59.0011 or
assignment by placement test. Fulfills
MAP language requirement. Continuation of V59.0011. In order to fulfill
MAP requirements and continue on to the
postintermediate level, a student must
complete both V59.0011 and
V59.0012. This sequence is equivalent to
V59.0020. 4 points.
182
•
ITALIAN
STUDIES
Quattro Chiacchiere:
Conversations in Italian
V59.0101 Prerequisite: V59.0030 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Students entering this course should
have mastered the fundamental
structure of Italian. Designed to help
students gain confidence and increase
their effectiveness in speaking present-day Italian. Through discussions, oral reports, and readings, students develop vocabulary in a variety
of topics, improve pronunciation,
and learn an extensive range of
idiomatic expressions.
Creative Writing in Italian
V59.0103 Formerly Rewriting Italian.
Prerequisite: V59.0030 or permission of
instructor. 4 points.
A creative approach to writing in
Italian that emphasizes transformations of texts. Students are encouraged to rewrite, parody, shift genres,
with the aim of improving their
writing and reading techniques.
Advanced Composition
V59.0105 Prerequisite: V59.0030 or
permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Aims to improve the student’s written Italian and reading comprehension of difficult texts. The approach
is threefold: (1) intensive study of the
syntactical structures of Italian; (2)
reading and analysis of contemporary
texts from various sources, such as
newspapers, magazines, and literary
works; and (3) frequent writing of
short compositions stressing grammatical and syntactical accuracy as
well as variety of vocabulary.
Survey of Modern Italian
Literature
V59.0116 Formerly Masterpieces in
Italian Literature II. Prerequisite:
V59.0030 or permission of the instructor.
4 points.
Introductory-level literature course
that, through a close reading of
authors such as Tasso, Alfieri, Foscolo, Leopardi, and Manzoni, focuses on
how to understand a literary text in
Italian. Discusses the history of Italian literature from the 16th century
to the modern period.
ADVANCED LITERATURE
COURSES
Prerequisites for the following courses are V59.0115 or V59.0116 when
the course is conducted in Italian, or
permission of the instructor.
Dante’s Divine Comedy
V59.0270 Identical to V65.0270
when taught in English. Ardizzone,
Freccero. 4 points.
Students study the Divine Comedy
both as a mirror of high medieval
culture and as a unique text that
breaks out of its cultural bounds.
The entire poem is read, in addition
to selections from the Vita Nuova and
other complementary minor works.
Petrarch, Boccaccio, and the
Dawn of the Renaissance
V59.0271 Identical to V65.0271
when taught in English. Ardizzone.
4 points.
A study of Petrarch’s Canzoniere and
Boccaccio’s Decameron with particular
emphasis on themes and conceptual
innovations. Attention also called to
the influence these authors had on
French and English literatures.
Petrarch and the Language of
Love
V59.0272 Formerly Italian Lyric Poetry. Ardizzone. 4 points.
A reading of Petrarch’s Canzoniere,
the book of lyrics that contains a history of love and a history of a restless
soul devoted to poetry. Focus is on
the relationship with classical antiquity and on Petrarch’s invention of a
language of love that will be influential for many centuries.
Pirandello and the Contemporary
Theatre
V59.0274 Identical to V30.0280
when taught in English. Erspamer.
4 points.
An introduction to Luigi Pirandello’s
major plays as they relate to the
foundation of contemporary theatre.
Attention is also paid to “grotesque”
and futurist drama. Works studied
include Six Characters in Search of
an Author, Right You Are (If You
Think So), Tonight We Improvise, and
Henry IV.
Contemporary Italian Narrative
V59.0275 Erspamer. 4 points.
Follows the development of the Italian narrative from Manzoni and
Verga to the present-day trends in
Italian prose. Emphasizes the work of
Tabucchi, Maraini, Pasolini, Morante.
Writers and Politics in the 20th
Century
V59.0277 Formerly Novel and Society.
Ben-Ghiat. 4 points.
This course looks at key moments in
20th-century Italian literary, cultural, and political history. Fascism, the
resistance, neorealism, and 1968 are
among the topics covered as we
explore the relationship of politics
and writing and the changing functions of writing through readings of
fictional and nonfictional texts (novels, stories, literary debates in the
press).
The Italian Woman: Literary
Perspectives
V59.0278 Identical to V42.0275.
Cavarero. 4 points.
Course explores female perspectives
and portrayals in Italian literature. In
addition to readings of prominent
women authors, students examine
the representation of women in literature with an eye to clarifying their
role in Italian society.
Italian Autobiographies
V59.0279 Formerly Writing the Italian Self. Identical to V42.0276.
Erspamer. 4 points.
Course examines strategies of selfrepresentation in autobiographies,
diaries, letters, and novels of selected
authors. Readings include selections
from Cellini, Alfieri, Pellico, Sciascia, Viganò, and others.
Italian Cinema and Literature
V59.0282 Identical to V30.0505.
Albertini, Ben-Ghiat. 4 points.
Studies the relationship between
Italian literature and post-World
War II cinema. Among the authors
and directors examined are Lampedusa, Bassani, Sciascia, Visconti,
DeSica, and Rosi.
Italian American Life in
Literature
V59.0286 Identical to V41.0724.
Hendin. 4 points.
A study of the fiction and poetry by
which Italian American writers have
expressed their heritage and their
engagement in American life. From
narratives of immigration to current
work by “assimilated” writers, the
course explores the depiction of Italian American identity. Challenging
stereotypes, it explores changing
family relationships, sexual mores,
and political and social concerns.
Topics in Italian Literature
V59.0285 4 points.
Courses on subjects of special interest
taught by either a regular or a visiting faculty member. For specific
courses, please consult the class
schedule.
CIVILIZATION COURSES
Prerequisites for the following courses
are any two advanced language
courses when the course is taught in
Italian, or permission of the instructor.
Dante and His World
V59.0160 Identical to V65.0801 and
V41.0143. Ardizzone, Freccero.
4 points.
Interdisciplinary introduction to late
medieval culture, using Dante, its
foremost literary artist, as a focus.
Attention is directed at literature,
art, and music, in addition to political, religious, and social developments of the time. Emphasizes the
continuity of Western tradition,
especially the classical background of
medieval culture, and its transmission to the modern world.
The Civilization of the Italian
Renaissance
V59.0161 Identical to V65.0161
when taught in English. Erspamer.
4 points.
Study of Italian Renaissance civilization from its roots in the Middle
Ages. Concentrates on the major
problems of the times: the rise of the
city-states and the evolution of the
signorie, the birth of new language
and art forms, and the changing attitudes toward the classical world, science, and philosophy. Students also
explore, through readings of chronicles, letters, and contemporary
documents, the effects such transformations had on the people of the
times, on their daily lives, and on
self-perceptions.
Modern Italy
V59.0164 Identical to V42.0163 and
V57.0168. 4 points.
A survey of Italian history from unification to the present. We examine
liberalism, fascism, World War II,
Christian Democracy, and Communism; the political crisis of the early
1990s, and the rise of new regional
and rightist parties.
Italian Fascism
V59.0165 Formerly Fascism and Culture. Ben-Ghiat. 4 points.
An interdisciplinary examination of
the cultural production of the fascist
period. Students examine the image
that the fascist regime produced of
itself through the study of popular
novels, architecture, film, and political speeches.
Contemporary Italy
V59.0166 Formerly Italy 2000. Identical to V42.0164. Erspamer. 4 points.
Beginning with the return to democracy and postwar reconstruction, the
course offers an analysis of the political, economic, and sociological
events that have shaped the Italian
nation since World War II. Students
examine, among other topics, the
battle against the Mafia, Italy’s
standing in the European community, and recent political changes.
ITALIAN
STUDIES
•
183
Italian Films, Italian Histories
V59.0169 Identical to V30.0506 and
V57.0176. Albertini, Ben-Ghiat.
4 points.
Studies representations of Italian history through the medium of film.
Fascism, the resistance, 1968, and
other events are covered, as are questions of how film functions with
respect to canonical national narratives and dominant systems of power.
Topics in Italian Culture
V59.0173 4 points.
Courses on subjects of special interest
taught by a regular or visiting faculty member. For specific course,
please consult the class schedule.
184
•
ITALIAN
STUDIES
INTERNSHIP
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Internship
V59.0980, 0981 Prerequisite:
permission of the department. 2 or 4
points per term.
The internship program offers upperlevel students the opportunity to
apply their studies to the outside
world. Working closely with a sponsor and a faculty adviser, students
may pursue internships in such
diverse areas as international trade,
banking, publishing, community
organizations, and television and
radio programs. Interested students
should apply to the department of
their proposed internship early in the
semester.
Independent Study
V59.0997, 0998 Prerequisite:
permission of the department. 2 or 4
points per term.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Qualified undergraduates may register for graduate courses in Italian
with the permission of the director of
graduate studies. A complete list of
appropriate graduate courses is
available in the department each
semester.
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Journalism and Mass
Communication (54)
1 0 WA S H I N G T O N P L A C E , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 3 6 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 7 9 8 0 .
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Associate Professor Rosen
ASSOCIATE CHAIR OF
THE DEPA RTMENT:
Associate Professor
Sternhell
DIRECTOR OF
U N D ER G R A D U AT E
STUDIES:
Clinical Associate
Professor Ludlum
Faculty
A
t New York University, we believe that journalism has a serious public mission and
can make a difference. We want to educate those who agree. Opportunities abound
in the media world, but the opportunity to do compelling work that informs,
engages—and matters—is what drives our faculty, motivates our students, and informs our
entire approach. Great journalism has always come from the great cities of the globe, and
there is no better place to learn the craft than the city of New York—where power and
wealth concentrate, news and culture originate, and daily events fascinate.
Centrally located in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village, the department immerses students in the richness and vitality of the city, while attracting to campus many of the leaders and thinkers in the journalism profession. New York City is our laboratory—and our
inspiration. The very first lesson we offer students is this: Tap into it, with our help. NYU
students study as interns in almost every major news organization in the city. They often
graduate to jobs in newspapers, magazines, broadcast outlets, and on-line operations headquartered in New York, though some choose to go elsewhere. And every day, students move
outward from the classroom to the city, on assignments that take them all over town.
The full-time faculty is itself of national stature in the journalism world. As writers, reporters, producers, and critics, NYU professors continue to practice the journalism
they teach and preach, holding the profession to its highest standards of public service.
Course work begins with the basic skills of reporting, writing, and research, but simultaneously students are taught what journalism at its best can be—and what it should accomplish in a free and democratic society. They are also encouraged to publish their work, with
assignments, internships, and on-line projects geared to this end.
Housed within the arts and sciences core of a leading university, the department
sees journalism as an essential strand in the liberal arts tradition and a critical factor in public culture. But we also recognize that news these days is a business. When our skilled graduates enter that business, they are prepared to improve and enliven it.
Department facilities include four state-of-the-art newsrooms, modern broadcast
production facilities, the Associated Press wire service, and desktop publishing.
Professors:
Burrows, Gitlin, Stephens, Willis
Assistant Professors:
Boynton, Dery, Linfield
Associate Professors:
Dent, Goozner, Kroeger, Newkirk,
Norman, Rock, Rosen, Serrin,
Solomon, Sternhell, Stone
Clinical Associate Professors:
Blood, Ludlum
JOURNALISM
AND
MASS
Director of Adjunct Relations
and Department Outreach:
Quigley
Director of Career Services:
Walterscheid
COMMUNICATION
•
185
Program
MAJOR
The major requires a total of 32
points in the Department of Journalism and Mass Communication, distributed as described below. Students
cannot take more than 36 points in
journalism. In addition, all journalism majors are required to complete
a minor in another academic department.
1. All majors must take The
Media in America, V54.0010. It is
recommended but not required that
V54.0010 be taken before other lecture courses. All majors must take
either Reporting I, V54.0021, or
Broadcast News Writing, V54.0022,
before any other skills course can be
taken. Reporting I and Broadcast
News Writing may not be taken by
students with fewer than 60 points
who have not completed the expository writing requirement. All students must pass V54.0021 or
V54.0022 with a grade of C or better in order to take any second-level
reporting or editing course.
Note: In general, Reporting I,
V54.0021, is a prerequisite for all
second-level print courses, and
Broadcast News Writing, V54.0022,
is a prerequisite for all second-level
broadcast courses.
2. All majors must select one of
three core curricula outlined below
and must satisfy the requirements for
that core.
Writing and reporting core:
Students must follow either a print
or a broadcast sequence within this
core. Required courses are as follows:
Print: Reporting I, V54.0021;
Courses
LECTURE COURSES
Media Ethics, Law, and the Public
Interest
V54.0008 4 points.
Critical examination of the development of ethical standards for journalists. Areas covered include deceptive
practices, conflict of interest, privacy,
sources, and the coverage of terrorism
and victims of crime.
The Media in America
V54.0010 Required of all students
majoring in journalism. Should be taken
early in the student’s program. 4 points.
Introduces the student to the history
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•
JOURNALISM
AND
Feature Article, V54.0125; and
either Reporting II, V54.0122, or
Magazine Article Writing,
V54.0231.
Broadcast: Broadcast News
Writing, V54.0022; TV Reporting,
V54.0273; and either The TV Newscast, V54.0272; Radio News,
V54.0171; or Advanced TV Reporting, V54.0274. In addition, students
in this core are required to take at
least one more lecture course and two
more skills courses. For those planning a career in journalism, we recommend they choose among these
professional areas of study and take
the suggested skills courses:
Newspaper journalism: Copy
Editing, V54.0123
Magazine journalism: Magazine
Editing and Production, V54.0230
Television journalism:
Advanced TV Reporting, V54.0274
(prerequisite: V54.0273)
Radio journalism: Radio News,
V54.0171
Note: Admission into the broadcast skills courses at any level may be
restricted, depending on availability
of facilities.
Media analysis and criticism
core: Required courses are Reporting
I, V54.0021; or Broadcast News
Writing, V54.0022; plus Understanding Communication,
V54.0041; and Methods of Media
Criticism, V54.0244. In addition,
students in this core are required to
take at least two of the following
courses: Media Ethics, Law, and the
Public Interest, V54.0008; Minorities and the Media, V54.0016; Tele-
vision and the Information Explosion, V54.0017; History of the
Media, V54.0018; Media and Society, V54.0298; and Women and the
Media, V54.0720.
In both cores, the remaining
points to complete the total of 32 are
to be selected from among the entire
offerings of the department or in other
departments by special permission.
Other College requirements
notwithstanding, journalism majors
and minors must achieve a grade of
C (not C-) or better in all journalism
courses to meet department degree
requirements. Grades below C do not
count toward the major or minor.
Students earning grades lower than C
must either repeat the course or take
an equivalent course, if permitted.
and development of the various mass
media in America, including newspapers, magazines, radio, and television,
with emphasis on news media. Students also discuss current issues and
trends within the context of the new
communications environment created
by digital information technologies.
Attention is given to the role of
advertising, public relations, media
ownership, and the public in shaping
the content of mass communication.
with other societal rights. Students
study key court cases, statutes, and
administrative rules in the areas of
defamation, privacy, access to information, broadcast regulation, and
journalists’ protection of confidential
sources, along with the government’s
use of prior restraint to protect
national security, the role of the FTC
in protecting the public from false
and deceptive commercial speech,
and the balance between a free press
and a fair trial.
Media and the Law
V54.0011 4 points.
Provides students with an understanding of the need to balance
absolute freedoms of speech and press
MASS
COMMUNICATION
MINOR
Completion of 16 points in the
department is required for the minor.
Media in America, V54.0010, and
Reporting I, V54.0021, or Broadcast
News Writing, V54.0022, are
required of all minors. In addition,
the student may take any other
courses offered by the department,
provided that the two remaining
courses include at least one skills
course with proper prerequisite.
HONORS
Juniors and seniors who have maintained a 3.5 overall GPA and a 3.5
in the journalism major are eligible
for our two-course, 8-point honors
program.
Mass Media and Government
V54.0013 4 points.
Contemporary and historical look at
the way in which the American mass
media cover the American political
process. Special attention to coverage
of the White House, the executive
agencies, Congress, the U.S. Supreme
Court, conventions, campaigns, and
elections. Examines the Washington
press corps, the press conference, the
press secretary, and governmental
secrecy for their impact on the quality of coverage. During election periods, evaluation of media coverage of
candidates for high office.
Minorities and the Media
V54.0016 Identical to V11.0016.
4 points.
Coverage of minorities and the relatively powerless continues to be one
of the most sensitive areas in American journalism. Topics include the
traditional basis of such coverage,
how it changed during the civil
rights upheaval of the 1960s and
early 1970s, what the prospects are
for further change, and whether the
mass media can ever truly serve and
be responsive to the needs of a socially
and economically diverse society.
Television and the Information
Explosion
V54.0017 4 points.
Studies the structure of the television
industry, with emphasis on the
effects of ratings and budgets on the
news divisions; history of television
news from Edward R. Murrow to the
present; the impact of television
news and documentaries on the public; commercial versus public television; the emergence of cable and its
effect on the broadcasting industry;
the effect of new technologies on
newsgathering; the role of government in broadcasting; and future
trends in broadcast news.
History of the Media
V54.0018 4 points.
Studies mass communication and its
wide-ranging effects on society
through its history and development.
Covers the cultural and political consequences of changes in the means of
communication, from clay tablets to
Gutenberg’s press and the spread of
the printed word, the development
of newspapers, the broadcast media,
and the revolution in video technology. Particular attention is paid to the
implications of literacy, the relationship between communication and
authority, and the nature of news.
The Literature of Journalism
V54.0020 Prerequisite: completion of
expository writing requirement. 4 points.
Students read the best reportage and
nonfiction literature from historical
times to the present, with emphasis
on the literary roots of modern journalism. Surveys a wide range of journalists and genres, including travel
and war reporting, profiles, essays,
autobiography, and classic reportage.
An intensive reading course that
applies literary technique to nonfiction narrative and exposition.
Understanding Communication
V54.0041 4 points.
Overview of the process and effects of
communication as they are studied
through the theories and methods of
the social sciences. Emphasis on the
components of the communication
process and the effects of the mass
media. Studies nonverbal, interpersonal group, organizational, and mass
communication. Students develop a
working knowledge of the key concepts, approaches, and findings of
the study of communication.
History of American Journalism
V54.0042 4 points.
Provides perspective on contemporary press criticism by examining the
shifts in worldview produced by
changes in purpose, ownership,
reporting standards, and dissemination techniques from the first American newsbooks and broadsides to the
television news broadcast.
Methods of Media Criticism
V54.0244 Prerequisite: V54.0041.
This course will satisfy either a skills or
a lecture requirement. 4 points.
Basic introduction to media criticism. Techniques for critical inquiry
into the structure and function of
mass media: research, content analysis, and analytical presentation of
results.
Media and Society
V54.0298 4 points.
Seminar in selected media problems,
possibly including journalism ethics,
television violence and children, the
reporter and his or her trade, media
economics, and media and national
security. See the instructor for current topic.
JOURNALISM
AND
MASS
Women and the Media
V54.0720 Identical to V97.0720.
4 points.
A collaborative seminar that examines the complex relationship (or different contradictory relationships)
between those humans we call
“women” and those forms of discourse we call “media.” Considers
women both as subjects and objects,
as creators of media in its many
forms and as media’s creations. What
does our culture’s media tell us about
its ideas of gender? What, if anything, does our gender tell us about
our readings of “media”?
SKILLS COURSES
Prerequisites: Students must complete Reporting I, V54.0021, or
Broadcast News Writing, V54.0022,
with a grade of C or better before
they can enroll in any other skills
course. Additional prerequisites are
listed.
Reporting I
V54.0021 Prerequisite: completion of
expository writing requirement or junior
rank. This or V54.0022 is required of
all students majoring or minoring in
journalism. Should be taken as early as
possible in the student’s career. Skills
course. 4 points.
Laboratory course in gathering and
writing the news for newspapers,
including news evaluation, reporting
and writing techniques, and specialized beats. Students write stories
under newsroom conditions.
Designed to give the journalism student extensive practice. Covers how
reporters are assigned stories, how
stories are planned and written, and
journalism ethics and responsibilities.
Broadcast News Writing
V54.0022 Prerequisite: completion of
expository writing requirement or junior
rank. This or V54.0021 is required of
all students majoring or minoring in
journalism. Admission may be restricted
depending on availability of facilities.
Should be taken as early as possible in the
student’s career. Skills course. 4 points.
Students learn TV and radio writing
styles and write stories on deadline.
Course covers how broadcast newsrooms work and broadcast journalism ethics and responsibilities.
COMMUNICATION
•
187
Methods of Media Criticism
V54.0244 Prerequisite: V54.0041.
This course will satisfy either a skills or
a lecture requirement. 4 points.
Basic introduction to media criticism. Techniques for critical inquiry
into the structure and function of
mass media: research, content analysis, and analytical presentation of
results.
Photojournalism
V54.0061 Skills course. 4 points.
Demonstration laboratory for the
beginning photojournalist, involving
the use of camera and lens, exposure,
film characteristics, and processing.
Composition, design, and content are
studied through shooting assignments typical of those encountered
by professionals. Class critiques are
an essential part of the course. A
camera with adjustable focus, shutter
speeds and f/stops, and a flash are
required for the course.
Reporting II
V54.0122 Suggested for all students
interested in pursuing a career in newspaper journalism. Skills course. 4 points.
Continuation of the basic news
reporting techniques learned in
Reporting I, but with an emphasis
on fieldwork and more advanced
concepts. Students who successfully
complete the Reporting I-Reporting
II sequence are expected to be able to
handle any basic news reporting
assignment with speed, accuracy, and
polish.
Copy Editing
V54.0123 Skills course. 4 points.
Familiarizes students with the skills
of a copy editor, including editing
for accuracy and news value, publication style, grammar, spelling, punctuation, and newspaper headline
writing.
The Interview
V54.0124 Open to both print and
broadcast students. Skills course. 4 points.
Theory and practice in preparing for,
arranging, and conducting the journalistic interview. Topics: how to get
an interview, why people permit
themselves to be interviewed, the
mechanics of interviewing, the psychology involved, how to handle special assignments and beat interviews,
and methods of overcoming special
problems. Extensive fieldwork is
required with written reports on outside interviews.
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JOURNALISM
AND
The Feature Article
V54.0125 Required of all students in
print reporting sequence. Skills course.
4 points.
Covers the fundamentals of writing
feature articles of newspaper length.
Close attention to style, organization,
human interest, the use of quotes,
leads, and article ideas as applied to
sidebars, light articles, profiles, service articles, and a variety of indepth stories. Writing assignments
both in and out of the classroom.
Radio News
V54.0171 Skills course. 4 points.
Advanced workshop designed to prepare students to write and report
radio news in a professional manner.
Students select the major late-breaking international, national, and local
stories and prepare complete newscasts under deadline; go into the
field to develop their own reports on
local stories of significance; and do
their own audio production work. At
term’s end, they produce a one-hour
news magazine that showcases their
writing, reporting, editing, and production skills.
Investigative Reporting: Computer-Assisted Reporting
V54.0229 It is recommended that students in the print sequence take
V54.0122 before V54.0229. Open to
both print and broadcast students. Skills
course. 4 points.
Gathering information for investigative stories using the Internet and
other databases. An introduction to
aspects of digital journalism.
Magazine Editing and Production
V54.0230 Prerequisites: V54.0125
and V54.0231. (V54.0231 may be
taken concurrently.) Skills course.
4 points.
Principles and methods of magazine
editing and production. Includes
practical training and instruction in
editorial work such as editing stories,
layout, proofreading, planning issues,
and desktop publishing. The main
assignment is a class project editing
and designing the departmental
magazine, Manhattan South.
Magazine Article Writing I
V54.0231 Prerequisite: V54.0125.
Required of all students concentrating in
magazine journalism. Skills course.
4 points.
The nonfiction magazine article in
theory and practice, including style,
MASS
COMMUNICATION
technique, and research methods.
Students select topics that interest
them but that also, in the view of
the instructor, are marketable. Articles are written under deadline conditions, then carefully read and criticized by the instructor, who acts as
editor.
The TV Newscast
V54.0272 Skills course. 4 points.
Writing and producing TV news
programs. During the term, students
produce 10 complete broadcasts that
are fed live to residence halls and
other locations on campus. Responsibilities include all aspects of TV
news: story selection and development, field production, anchoring,
reporting, operation of all studio and
control room equipment, writing,
copy editing, and directing. Deadline realities are emphasized as live
broadcasts begin on an exact-time
basis.
TV Reporting
V54.0273 Required of all students in
broadcast reporting sequence. Admission
may be restricted depending on availability of facilities. Skills course. 4 points.
TV field reporting. Students learn
location reporting skills, including
interviewing and editing. Students
work in small groups, and at term’s
end, each student produces a threeminute final project. There is a fourhour lecture and a three-hour production lab.
Advanced TV Reporting
V54.0274 Prerequisite: V54.0273.
Skills course. 4 points.
Advanced TV news on-location
reporting class in which students
develop skills under the real-time
pressures of a same-day production
schedule. The stories are fed into the
TV Newscast course. Class meets
twice a week. There is an editorial
meeting on Tuesday and production
day on Thursday.
Critical Writing
V54.0281 Prerequisite: one other skills
course in addition to V54.0021. Skills
course. 4 points.
Aims to develop students’ ability to
analyze and critique the arts, popular
culture, and social issues. Students
read the work of social and cultural
critics and write reviews and cultural
commentary. The course emphasizes
discussion of the debates on art, politics, and cultural issues that provide
the context for informed critical
writing.
Internship
V54.0290 Prerequisites: senior journalism major, 3.0 average in journalism,
and written permission of the department.
4 points.
Superior students are given an
opportunity to work 12 hours a week
with cooperating metropolitan New
York publications and broadcast stations. Their work is edited and evaluated by staff supervisors of the participating media. Emphasis is on
professionalism.
Advanced Individual Study
V54.0299 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. 1-4 points.
Students who, in the opinion of the
department, possess intellectual
independence and ability are permitted to carry on individual work in a
field of study selected in conference
with members of the faculty. To
register in this course, a student
must have written approval of the
department.
HONORS COURSES
Honors: Issues and Experiments
in Journalism
V54.0300 Prerequisite: a 3.5 overall
GPA and a 3.5 in the journalism major.
4 points.
This is the first section of a twocourse, 8-point honors program
JOURNALISM
AND
MASS
intended for juniors and seniors. The
course raises central questions about
the nature and weaknesses of contemporary journalism and asks students to undertake assignments
designed to test methods of addressing those weaknesses.
Honors: Advanced Reporting
V54.0301 Prerequisite: a 3.5 GPA
overall and a 3.5 in the journalism
major. 4 points.
Intended for juniors and seniors, the
course mixes learning about a subject
with reporting on that subject. It is
designed to encourage a deeper, more
informed journalism. The course
concludes with a major reporting
project—the equivalent of an honors
thesis.
COMMUNICATION
•
189
PROGRAM IN
Latin American Studies
Major offered in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures
19
DIRECTOR OF
U N D E RG R A D U AT E
STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Dopico Black
DIRECTOR OF
SPANISH LANGUAGE
P RO G R A M:
Senior Language
Lecturer Némethy
Courses
UNIVERSITY
PLACE,
NEW
YORK,
NY
10003-4556.
(212)
998-8770.
L
atin American Studies is an interdisciplinary major offered in the Department of
Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures. This area focuses on the historical, political, social, and cultural patterns of Latin American development and should
be of particular interest to students planning careers in academia, government, business,
international organizations, or other fields relating to Latin America.
Students choosing this major have the opportunity to study Latin American literature and culture in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures,
as well as courses related to Latin America in other departments and/or programs throughout the University, including Africana studies, anthropology, comparative literature, history, politics, fine arts, cinema studies (in Tisch School of the Arts), etc. This nine-course combined major requires proficiency in the Spanish language and a working knowledge of Portuguese and should be planned in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies
in the Department of Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures.
Some recommended courses outside
of the Department of Spanish and
Portuguese Languages and Literatures typically offered during the
academic year:
Politics of the Caribbean Nations
V53.0532 4 points.
AFRICANA STUDIES (11)
MORSE ACADEMIC PLAN
(55)
Inter-American Relations
V53.0780 4 points.
Language and Liberation: At
Home in the Caribbean and
Abroad
V11.0801 4 points.
World Cultures: Pre-Columbian
America
V55.0513 4 points.
ANTHROPOLOGY (14)
World Cultures: Latin America
V55.0515 4 points.
Peoples of Latin America
V14.0103 4 points.
Peoples of the Caribbean
V14.0102 4 points.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
(29)
Topics in Caribbean Literature
V29.0132 4 points.
POLITICS (53)
Politics of Latin America
V53.0530 4 points.
190
•
LATIN
AMERICAN
World Cultures: Contemporary
Latino Cultures
V55.0529 4 points.
HISTORY (57)
Intro Seminar: Topics in Latin
American History
V57.0096 4 points.
History of Colonial Latin America
V57.0743 4 points.
History of Modern Latin America
V57.0745 4 points.
STUDIES
Topics in Latin American and
Caribbean History
V57.0750 4 points.
History of Mexico and Central
America
V57.0752 4 points.
History of the Andes
V57.0753 4 points.
Conquest and the Origins of
Colonialism in Latin America and
the Caribbean
V57.0757 4 points.
History of the Caribbean
V57.0759 4 points.
Seminar: Latin America and the
Caribbean
V57.0799 4 points.
Please note that in addition to nine
courses related to Latin American
studies, this major also requires
knowledge of Spanish at the level of
Advanced Spanish Review (V95.0030)
and of Portuguese at the level of
Intensive Elementary Portuguese
(V87.0010) or Intensive Elementary
Portuguese for Spanish Speakers
(V87.0011).
INSTITUTE FOR
Law and Society (62)
Minor
161 AVENUE OF THE AMERICAS, 12TH FLOOR, NEW YORK, NY 10013.
( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 5 3 6 . F A X ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 5 - 4 0 3 4 . E - M A I L : L AW. S O C I E T Y @ N Y U . E D U .
DIRECTOR OF THE
INSTITUTE:
Associate Professor
Harrington
A
number of the liberal arts disciplines in the College of Arts and Science can provide
important perspectives on the subjects of law and the legal profession. The law and
society minor offers undergraduates a meaningful cluster of courses in this area. The
requirement of five courses allows this interdisciplinary minor to be substantial, and the
inclusion of a core course enhances its coherence. In addition, the minor gives capable and
ambitious students special opportunities to pursue advanced, specialized, or hands-on
work. While prelaw students may well wish to take it, this minor is not aimed specifically
at them.
A faculty executive committee oversees the Law and Society minor. It consists of
Professors Jo Dixon (sociology), David Greenberg (sociology), Christine Harrington (politics and director, Institute for Law and Society), Wolf Heydebrand (sociology), and Dorothy
Nelkin (sociology and School of Law). Please contact the Institute for Law and Society for
additional information and advising.
Program
The minor in law and society consists of five courses, as follows:
1. Either Law and Society,
V62.0333 (politics) or Law in Society, V62.0413 (sociology) and
2. Four courses selected from the
list below. To ensure the minor’s
interdisciplinary character, no more
than two of these four may be from
any one department. Exceptional students may be allowed, in their senior
year and in consultation with the
minor adviser, to substitute for one
of the four courses, either
a. an internship in an existing
departmental program, e.g., in metropolitan studies or politics; or
b. an independent study involv-
ing a research paper or project or an
apprenticeship with a faculty member doing relevant research; or
c. a relevant graduate course.
Note: Courses applied to the
major cannot also be counted toward
this minor.
Courses
ANTHROPOLOGY
CLASSICS
GERMAN
Language and Problem Solving:
The Legal Process and Narrated
Self* G14.1702.
The History of Ancient Law
V62.0292 Identical to V27.0292.
Law and Literature V62.0295
Given in English. Identical to
V51.0295.
Human Rights V62.0321 Identical
to V14.0321.
ASIAN/PACIFIC/AMERICAN
STUDIES
Asian American Communities
V62.0800 Identical to V15.0800.
ECONOMICS
Economics of the Law* V62.0255
Identical to V31.0255.
FINE ARTS
Urban Design and the Law*
V62.0037 Identical to V43.0037.
HISTORY
Crime in Modern European
Culture V62.0293 Identical to
V57.0293.
The American Legal Profession
in the 20th Century V62.0650
Identical to V57.0650.
LAW
AND
SOCIETY
•
191
JOURNALISM AND MASS
COMMUNICATION
Media Ethics, Law, and the Public
Interest V62.0008 Identical to
V54.0008.
Media and the Law V62.0011
Identical to V54.0011.
LAW AND SOCIETY
Urban Settlements: Law, Housing, and Conflict in New York
City V62.0249
Global Sweatshop V62.0250
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
Seminar on Islamic Law and
Society V62.0780
Women and Islamic Law
V62.0784
MORSE ACADEMIC PLAN
Societies and Social Sciences: Psychological Perspectives—Violence
V55.0680
Societies and Social Sciences:
Sociological Perspectives—The
Rule of Law V55.0690
Independent Study V62.0997 and
V62.0998
PHILOSOPHY
METROPOLITAN STUDIES
Philosophy of Law* V62.0052
(formerly V62.0064) Identical to
V83.0052.
Law and Urban Problems
V62.0232 Identical to V99.0232.
Topics: Asian American Civil
Rights and the Law* (not offered
regularly) V62.0346 Identical to
V99.0346.
POLITICS
The American Constitution
V62.0330 Identical to V53.0330.
•
LAW
AND
SOCIETY
Gender in Law V62.0336 Identical
to V53.0336.
The Politics of Administrative
Law V62.0359 Identical to
V53.0359.
PSYCHOLOGY
Psychology of Law* V62.0076
Identical to V89.0076.
SOCIOLOGY
Law in Society V62.0413 Identical
to V93.0413.
Deviance and Social Control
V62.0502 Identical to V93.0502.
Criminology V62.0503 Identical to
V93.0503.
Seminar in Sociology: Gender,
Politics, and Law* V62.0936 Identical to V93.0936.
Civil Liberties V62.0332 Identical
to V53.0332.
American Law and Legal Systems
V62.0334 Identical to V53.0334.
192
Law and Society V62.0335 Identical to V53.0335.
*Please consult the relevant departmental
listing for course prerequisites.
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Linguistics (61)
7 1 9 B R O A D WA Y, 5 T H F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 8 6 0 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 7 9 5 0 .
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Szabolcsi
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Associate Professor
Dougherty
Faculty
L
inguistics is the science of human language. It seeks to determine that which is necessary in human language, that which is possible, and that which is impossible.
While linguists work to determine the unique qualities of individual languages, they
are constantly searching for linguistic universals, for properties whose explanatory power
reaches across languages. The discipline of linguistics is organized around syntax (the principles by which sentences are organized), morphology (the principles by which words are
constructed), semantics (the study of meaning), phonetics (the study of speech sounds),
phonology (the sound patterns of language), historical linguistics (the ways in which languages change over time), sociolinguistics (the interaction of language with society), psycholinguistics, and neurolinguistics (the representation of language in the brain). Current
research by faculty members extends across the field: it includes topics in the interaction of
syntax and semantics, phonetics and phonology, languages in contact, pidgin and creole languages, urban sociolinguistics, and computer analogies of syntactic processes.
Professor Emerita:
Umeda
Research Professor:
Postal
Professors:
Baltin, Costello, Guy, Kayne,
Singler, Szabolcsi
Adjunct Professors:
Honorof, Vasvari
Associate Professor:
Dougherty
Assistant Professors:
Anttila, Blake, Gafos, Starke
Program
MAJOR REQUIREMENTS
The major consists of eight 4-point
courses (32 points) in linguistics.
These must include (1) Linguistic
Perspectives, V55.0660, or Language
and Mind, V61.0028, or Language,
V61.0001, (2) Sound and Language,
V61.0011, (3) Phonological Analysis, V61.0012, (4) Grammatical
Analysis, V61.0013; (5) two of the
following courses, from two different
areas: historical linguistics (V61.0014,
V61.0017, or V61.0076), sociolinguistics (V61.0015 or V61.0018),
Visiting Assistant Professor:
Fong
(Russian and Slavic Studies),
Grishman (Computer Science),
Marcus (Psychology), McChesney
(Middle Eastern Studies), McElree
(Psychology), Momma (English),
Sager (Computer Science), Schieffelin
(Anthropology), Schiffer (Philosophy)
Affiliated Faculty in Other
Departments:
Aaronson (Psychology), Fryscák
psycholinguistics (V61.0005),
semantics (V61.0004) and computational linguistics (V61.0003 or
V61.0024), (6) two courses freely
chosen from the offerings of the
department, including those listed in
(5). It is highly recommended that
majors and joint majors take the
courses in (1), (2), and (4) first, since
(3) and (5) have these as prerequisites
or generally presuppose their content.
Note: No grade lower than C
may be counted toward the major or
toward a joint major. All linguistics
majors, joint majors and combined
majors must register for linguistics
courses through the director of
undergraduate studies in the linguistics department. If any course fulfills
the major or minor requirements in
any other department or program at
NYU, it may not be used simultaneously to fulfill the requirements for
the linguistics majors.
Joint majors: It is possible for a
student to complete a joint major in
linguistics and in one of the foreign
languages listed below. The linguis-
LINGUISTICS
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tics part of this major may be satisfied by taking (1) V61.0001,
V61.0028, or V55.0660, (2)
V61.0011, (3) V61.0013, and (4) a
total of two courses, one from any
two of the following areas: historical
linguistics, sociolinguistics, phonology, syntax, semantics, and computational linguistics. The foreign language part of this major may be satisfied as follows.
Major in French and linguistics: Four courses beyond V45.0030,
including the following: one course
in spoken contemporary French,
V45.0101 or V45.0102; one course
in advanced written French
(V45.0105, V45.0106, V45.0107,
V45.0110); two courses in French
literature (in French).
Major in German and linguistics: Four courses beyond the intermediate level, consisting of an
advanced conversation or composition course (V51.0111 or V51.0114);
an advanced culture course
(V51.0132, V51.0133, or
V51.0143); Introduction to German
Literature (V51.0152); and an additional advanced literature course, in
German, to be selected from among
departmental offerings.
Major in Italian and linguistics: Four courses beyond V59.0030,
including the following: two
advanced language courses to be chosen from V59.0101, V59.0103,
V59.0105, and V59.0109 and two
advanced courses in either literature
or civilization.
Major in Spanish and linguistics: Five courses chosen in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies.
Joint major in anthropology
and linguistics: This major emphasizes the complementarity of sociolinguistic and anthropological
approaches to language. Students are
required to take 20 points (five
courses) each from anthropology and
linguistics. A grade of at least C is
required in every course to be counted toward a joint major. Required
courses in anthropology: Human
Society and Culture, V14.0001;
Anthropology of Language,
V14.0017; Cultural Symbols,
V14.0048; and two other cultural or
linguistic anthropology courses
approved by the director of undergraduate studies. Required courses in
linguistics: Language, V61.0001, or
Societies and the Social Sciences: Linguistic Perspectives, V55.0660; Lan-
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LINGUISTICS
guage and Society, V61.0015; and at
least two of the following: Bilingualism, V61.0018; Language, Literacy,
and Society, V61.0020; Sex, Gender,
and Language, V61.0021; African
American Vernacular English: Language and Culture, V61.0023; Language and Liberation at Home in the
Caribbean and Abroad, V61.0026;
and Language in Latin America,
V61.0030. The fifth course in linguistics may be an additional course
from the above list or any other
course that the department offers.
Joint major in language and
mind: This major, intended as an
introduction to cognitive science, is
administered by the Departments of
Linguistics, Philosophy, and Psychology. Eleven courses are required (four
in linguistics, one in philosophy, five
in psychology, and one additional
course) to be constituted as follows.
The linguistics component consists
of Language, V61.0001 or
V55.0660; Grammatical Analysis,
V61.0013; Language and Mind,
V61.0028; and one more course chosen from Computational Principles of
Sentence Construction, V61.0024;
Phonological Analysis, V61.0012;
and Introduction to Semantics,
V61.0004. The philosophy component consists of one course, chosen
from Minds and Machines,
V83.0015; Philosophy of Language,
V83.0085; and Logic, V83.0070.
The required psychology component
consists of four courses: Introduction
to Psychology, V89.0001; either Statistical Reasoning for the Behavioral
Sciences, V89.0009, or Statistics for
the Behavioral Sciences, V89.0010;
The Psychology of Language,
V89.0056; and Cognition,
V89.0029; in addition, one course,
chosen from Seminar in Thinking,
V89.0026; Language Acquisition
and Cognitive Development,
V89.0300; and Laboratory in
Human Cognition, V89.0028. The
11th course will be one of the abovelisted courses that has not already
been chosen to satisfy the departmental components.
Joint majors should consult with
the respective directors of undergraduate studies of the departments
involved.
MINOR
Four courses (16 points) in linguistics with a grade of C or better in
each. If any course fulfills the major
or minor requirements in any other
department or program at NYU, it
may not be used simultaneously to
fulfill the requirements for the linguistics minor.
RECOMMENDED WORK
OUTSIDE THE DEPARTMENT
To meet standards currently set in
the linguistics field, as well as graduate school admission requirements,
students majoring in linguistics are
advised to gain competence in the
areas listed below during their
undergraduate studies:
1. One or more foreign languages
2. Psychology for issues of language and the mind and anthropology for issues of language and culture
3. Mathematics or logic for an
understanding of modern algebra and
mathematical logic
4. Philosophy of language
5. One or more computer
languages
Majors and minors should avail
themselves of the NYU study abroad
programs. Any course substitution or
transfer credit toward a required
course for the major must be confirmed by a letter from the director
of undergraduate studies.
HONORS PROGRAM
A major or joint major who wishes
to graduate with honors must have
an average of 3.6 or better in all linguistics course work. Students wishing to participate in the honors program will work with the director of
undergraduate studies, beginning in
the student’s junior year, to map an
advanced course of study, one that
will culminate in an honors thesis.
The course of study will entail extra
work in two or more relevant undergraduate linguistics courses or will
instead entail completion of at least
two relevant graduate courses within
the department (or a combination of
these two strategies). In the course of
doing this additional work, the student will construct a thesis proposal
and select an adviser with whom to
work. The student will then complete the thesis while enrolled in an
independent study course with the
thesis adviser, ordinarily in the student’s final semester prior to graduation. For general requirements,
please see under Honors and Awards.
Courses
Language
V61.0001 Costello. 4 points.
Introduces phonetics, phonology,
morphology, and generative grammar (syntax). Includes discussion of
first and second language acquisition
and language contact. Traces the origins of writing and the development
of the alphabet. Introduces genealogical classification of languages and
concepts of language change, in
particular, phonological change.
Compares English with various IndoEuropean and non-Indo-European
languages.
Communication: Men, Minds,
and Machines
V61.0003 Dougherty. 4 points.
Examines signs and symbols in the
communication of humans, primates,
birds, computers, automata, simulata, etc. and discusses definitions of
sign, symbol, intelligence, artificial
intelligence, mind, cognition, meaning, etc. Concerns the matter
expressed by the symbol systems and
the manner in which the matter is
expressed: literally, abstractly,
metaphorically, as a simile, by insinuation, and other methods.
Introduction to Semantics
V61.0004 Szabolcsi. 4 points.
Focuses on the compositional semantics of sentences. Introduces set theory, propositional logic, and predicate
logic as tools and goes on to investigate the empirical linguistic issues of
presuppositions, quantification,
scope, and polarity. Points out parallelisms between the nominal and the
verbal domains. Examines the acquisition of meaning by children learning their first language.
Introduction to Psycholinguistics
V61.0005 Starke. 4 points.
Discusses how young children
acquire their knowledge of language,
both in normal development and in
pathological cases (specific language
impairment, SLI). Introduces both
the conceptual problem of acquisition (innateness, poverty of stimulus,
relation of language to mind) and
the work that lead to the breakthroughs of the last two decades
(nonnutritive sucking experiments
with infants, analysis of the CHILDES
data base with older children, etc.).
Shows how linguistic theory and
empirical research directed at first
language acquisition interact. Adopts
a hands-on approach.
Sound and Language
V61.0011 Anttila, Gafos, Guy.
4 points.
Introduction to phonetic and phonological theory at an elementary level.
Topics include the description and
analysis of speech sounds, the anatomy and physiology of speech, speech
acoustics, phonological processes.
Students develop skills to distinguish and produce sounds used in
the languages of the world and to
transcribe them using the International Phonetic Alphabet.
Phonological Analysis
V61.0012 Prerequisite: V61.0011 or
permission of the instructor. Anttila,
Gafos. 4 points.
Introduction to phonology, the area
of linguistics that investigates how
languages organize sounds into highly constrained systems. The fundamental questions include: What do
the sound systems of all languages
have in common? How can they differ from each other? What is the
nature of phonological processes and
why do they occur? Students develop
analytical skills by solving phonological problems based on data from a
wide variety of languages.
Grammatical Analysis
V61.0013 Prerequisite: V61.0001 or
V55.0660 or permission of the instructor.
Baltin, Starke. 4 points.
Considers the nature of grammatical
rules and the relation between the
grammar of a language and its acquisition by children. Also deals with
the proper balance between syntax
and semantics and the role of crosslinguistic considerations (comparison
with other languages) in formulating
the grammar of a particular language.
Language Change
V61.0014 Prerequisite: V61.0001 or
V55.0660. Costello. 4 points.
Introduces students to the methods
of genealogical classification and
subgrouping of languages. Examines patterns of replacement in
phonology, morphology, and syntax.
Focuses on internal and comparative
phonological, morphological, and
syntactic reconstruction. Considers
phonological developments such as
Grimm’s, Grassmann’s, and Verner’s
Laws, in detail.
Language and Society
V61.0015 Singler. 4 points.
Considers contemporary issues in the
interaction of language and society,
particularly work on speech variation
and social structure. Focuses on ways
in which social factors affect language. Topics include language as a
social and political issue; regional,
social, and ethnic speech varieties;
bilingualism; pidgin and creole
languages.
The Indo-European Family
V61.0017 Costello. 4 points.
Presents the phonological and
morphological systems of ProtoIndo-European, and considers the
development thereof in the major
branches of Indo-European family of
languages, in particular Indic, Hellenic, Slavic, Italic, and Germanic.
Bilingualism
V61.0018 Blake, Singler. 4 points.
Reviews literature on various bilingual and multilingual communities
and considers major linguistic and
social issues raised by the phenomenon of multilingualism.
Structure of English Vocabulary
V61.0019 Costello. 4 points.
Deals with the origins of structures
of English words. Whereas 97 percent of the vocabulary of Old English was Germanic, over 80 percent
of the present-day vocabulary is borrowed. This course focuses on that
portion which is borrowed from the
classical languages (Latin and Greek)
either directly or indirectly through
French. Examines the historical and
sociolinguistic circumstances of borrowing, the stem-affix structure of
borrowed words, together with the
regularities of their pronunciation
and meaning. This course relies on
elementary phonology, morphology,
and semantics and is recommended
for nonmajors.
Sex, Gender, and Language
V61.0021 Identical to V97.0121.
Vasvari. 4 points.
Examines gender-based differences
in language structure including
hidden sexism, semantic space, the
“he/man” debate, and titles/references to the sexes.
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195
African American Vernacular
English: Language and Culture
V61.0023 Identical to V11.0023.
Blake. 4 points.
Introduces the language behavior of
African Americans. Discusses African
American Vernacular English in
terms of its linguistic and cultural
distinctiveness, both intrasystemically and in comparison with other
dialects of American English. Relates
the English vernacular spoken by
African Americans in urban settings
to creole languages spoken on the
South Carolina Sea Islands (Gullah),
in the Caribbean, and in West
Africa. Also approaches the subject
from the perspective of the history of
the expressive uses of African American Vernacular English (e.g., in signifyin’ and rappin’) and the educational, attitudinal, and social implications connected with the language.
Computational Principles of Sentence Construction
V61.0024 Prerequisite: an introductory
course in the language and mind major or
permission of the instructor. Dougherty.
4 points.
Introduces students to the basic
computational tools available for formulating linguistic and psycholinguistic models of competence and
performance. Discusses classical
problems in perception and description of verb-particle constructions,
questions, passives, and garden-path
sentences. Considers how parsers
operate in structurally different languages such as Chinese and English.
Students learn sufficient computer
skills (Unix, Lisp, and Prolog) to run
public domain programs that model
a human being’s language production and perception capacities. Students have computer accounts in the
PC Lab and on a Unix system and
obtain hands-on experience with
artificial intelligence and expert
systems programs using symbolic
logical based computer languages.
Students use the Web and the Internet. They may base their research on
existing programs or write their own.
Languages in Contact
V61.0025 Prerequisite: V61.0001 or
V55.0660 or permission of the instructor.
Costello, Guy, Singler. 4 points.
Introduces students to the ways in
which a language changes as the
result of prolonged contact with
another language. Considers bilingual language acquisition, the
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LINGUISTICS
impact of contact on various types
and styles of language, diglossia, and
language maintenance and language
shift.
Language and Liberation at
Home in the Caribbean and
Abroad
V61.0026 Identical to V11.0801.
Blake. 4 points.
Explores the linguistic and cultural
transformations that took place in
the Commonwealth Caribbean from
17th-century slavery and bond servitude to the present day. Focus is on
the extent to which Caribbean people were given or demanded the freedom to create and maintain a postcolonial Caribbean identity. We first
discuss the sociohistorical conditions
that led to the creation of new
Caribbean languages called “pidgins”
and “creoles” as the English language
was transplanted from Britain to the
Third World. We then explore the
relationship of the English-based creoles to the social, cultural, political,
and literary/expressive aspects of the
contexts in which they existed, and
in which they continue to exist today
in the Caribbean, as well as in
Britain and the United States. As far
as possible, parallels are drawn to
French- and Spanish-influenced
Caribbean communities.
Grammatical Diversity
V61.0027 Prerequisite: V61.0013 or
permission of the instructor. Kayne,
Starke. 4 points.
Introduces the syntax of languages
quite different from English, from
various parts of the world. Considers
what they may have in common with
English and with each other and how
to characterize the ways in which
they differ from English and from
each other.
Language and Mind
V61.0028 Identical to V89.0027.
Baltin, Gafos, Marcus, McElree,
Szabolcsi. 4 points.
Introduces students to the field of
cognitive science through an examination of language behavior. Begins
with interactive discussions of how
best to characterize and study the
mind. These principles are then
illustrated through an examination
of research and theories related to
language representation and use.
Draws from research in both formal
linguistics and psycholinguistics.
Morphology
V61.0029 Anttila. 4 points.
An introduction to study of the
internal structure of words. The two
main problems in morphology are
(1) how to account for the surface
variability of formatives (allomorphy)
and (2) how to account for their
combinatorial properties (morphosyntax). Beginning from the
techniques and problems of structuralist morpheme analysis, two
major approaches to allomorphy are
introduced: the morpheme-based
model and the word-based model. In
morphosyntax, we concentrate on the
question to what extent morphological combination is a matter of syntax
vs. the lexicon. Emphasis is on constructing morphological hypotheses
and linguistic argumentation. The
assignments involve in-depth analyses of data from various languages.
Language in Latin America
V61.0030 Guy. 4 points.
Examines the diversity of language
usage in modern Latin America and
considers historical perspectives as to
how the present situation came
about. Considers the dialectology of
Latin America: how and why American varieties of Spanish and Portuguese differ from European varieties; the distribution and nature of
dialect differences in different
regions of the Americas. Examines
sociolinguistic issues, such as class
and ethnic differences in Spanish and
Portuguese in the Americas, the origin and development of standard and
nonstandard varieties, and the effects
of contact with Amerindian and
African languages. Considers Spanish- and Portuguese-based creoles
and the question of prior creolization
in the popular speech of Brazil,
Cuba, and other areas with a substantial population of African decent.
Other topics include bilingualism,
code switching, language attitudes,
the impact of contact with English,
and the present status of indigenous
languages.
Form, Meaning, and the Mind
V61.0031 Prerequisites: V61.0004 or
permission of the instructor, and
V61.0013. Baltin. 4 points.
This course deals with the relationship between cognitive organization
on the one hand and the interaction
between syntax and semantics in natural language. It focuses on the
debate within cognitive science as to
whether or not the mind is modular
(divided into distinct faculties, such
as language, vision, and perhaps others). Discusses the relationship of
this debate to the debate within linguistics as to whether or not syntax
is an autonomous component of a
grammar that feeds semantics, but
does not depend on semantics itself
for its functioning. Examines works
in cognitive science about modularity and works in linguistics that bear
on the question of the autonomy of
syntax.
A Cultural History of Computers,
Robots, and Artificial Intelligence
V61.0051 Dougherty. 4 points.
Considers primary source material on
the mind-body problem and on linguistic criteria for intelligence starting with Galileo and Descartes, and
continuing up to the present day.
Examines mechanical analogies of
mind developed since 1500. Readings from Galileo, Descartes,
Voltaire, Huxley, Darwin, Arnauld,
Turing, Kuhn, and Penfield. Focuses
on Chomsky’s Cartesian linguistics
and the claim that current ideas concerning mind, language, and intelligence parallel closely those of the
Cartesians of the 17th century.
Etymology
V61.0076 Identical to V27.0023.
Costello. 4 points.
Traces the origin and development of
English words. Discusses ways in
which new words are created. Introduces concepts of phonological and
semantic change, which students will
apply in identifying cognates linking
English with other language, in particular, but not limited to, Latin and
Greek.
Seminar: Research on Current
Problems in Linguistics
V61.0102 Prerequisite: permission of
the instructor. 4 points.
Variable content course; see the
description of each offering at the
department’s home page.
Internship
V61.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. In the term prior to the internship, the
student must present a written description
of the proposed internship that clearly
indicates the linguistic content of the project. 1 to 4 points.
Independent Study
V61.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the director of undergraduate studies. 1 to 4 points each term.
LINGUISTICS
•
197
PROGRAM IN
Literature in Translation
Minor
1 9
U N I V E R S I T Y
Associate Professor
Zezula
T
198
LITERATURE
DIRECTOR OF THE
P RO G R A M:
P L A C E ,
N E W
Y O R K ,
N Y
1 0 0 0 3 - 4 5 5 6 .
he literature in translation minor is open to all students. Participating in the program are the Skirball Department of Hebrew and Judaic Studies and the Departments of Classics; Comparative Literature; Dramatic Literature, Theatre History,
and the Cinema; East Asian Studies; English; French; German; Italian; Middle Eastern
Studies; Russian and Slavic Studies; and Spanish and Portuguese Languages and Literatures.
The minor consists of 16 points (four 4-point courses) taken in applicable courses
offered by the participating departments. A student majoring in a specific language cannot
take courses in the same language under this minor but can take courses in literature in
translation in other languages under this minor.
The following are courses in literature in translation:
1. Courses in foreign literature taught in English listed under the foreign language
departments, such as The Comedies of Greece and Rome, V27.0144, or Women Writers in
France, V45.0835.
2. The courses History of Drama and Theatre, V30.0110, 0111, offered by the
Department of Dramatic Literature, Theatre History, and the Cinema, in addition to relevant
courses cross-listed with the Department of English or with foreign language departments.
A complete list of courses offered in this minor during a specific term may be found
in the directory of classes.
IN
TRANSLATION
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Mathematics (63)
251
DIRECTOR, COURANT
INSTITUTE OF
M AT HE MATIC A L
SCIENCES:
Professor McLaughlin
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTMENT:
Professor Spencer
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Professor Shatah
Faculty
MERCER
S T R E E T,
YORK,
NY
10012-1185.
(212)
998-3005.
T
he undergraduate division of the Department of Mathematics offers a wide variety
of courses in both pure and applied mathematics. The faculty are members of the
University’s Courant Institute of Mathematical Sciences, noted for its advanced
training and research programs, which emphasize the applications of mathematics to technology and other branches of science.
Joint programs are available in mathematics and (1) computer science, (2) economics, (3) engineering, and (4) secondary school education. They lead to the B.A. degree
in four years, with the exception of the engineering option, which leads to a joint B.S.
degree from New York University and B.E. degree from Stevens Institute of Technology in
five years. All this is described in more detail below. Special courses in the mathematical
aspects of biology and medicine are also available.
Outstanding students may join an honors program and be admitted to selected
courses at the graduate level. All students have access to the institute’s library, which
houses a large up-to-date collection of books and technical journals in mathematics and
computer science.
Professors Emeriti:
Bazer, Bromberg, Burrow, Edwards,
Hirsch, Isaacson, Karal, Karp, Lax,
Morawetz, Nirenberg, Peters,
Shapiro, Ting, Ungar
Professors:
Avellaneda, Berman, Bogomolov,
Cappell, Cheeger, Childress, Colding, Deift, Garabedian, Goodman,
Program
NEW
CAS MATHEMATICS
REQUIREMENT
Students entering the College of
Arts and Science who are not majoring in mathematics, computer science, or any of the physical sciences
are required to take one of the following Morse Academic Plan (MAP)
courses: Quantitative Reasoning,
V55.010X; Games of Chance,
V63.0011; or Elementary Statistics,
Greengard, Greenleaf, Gromov,
Hameiri, Hausner, Hofer, Kohn, Lin,
McKean, McLaughlin, Newman,
Novikoff, Percus, Peskin, Pollack,
Sarnak, Schwartz, Shatah, Shelley,
Spencer, Varadhan, Weitzner,
Widlund, Yap, Yau, Young
Assistant Professors:
Cai, Y. Chen, Vanden-Eijnden,
Holland, Serfaty, Zhang
Courant Instructors:
Betterton, T. Chen, Cowieson, Fang,
Gunturk, Haven, LaNave, Lerman,
Li, Suidan, Yan
Associate Professors:
Goldman, Kleeman, Masmoudi,
Rinzel, Tabak, Tranchina
V63.0012. They can also take Algebra and Calculus with Applications
to Business and Economics,
V63.0017; or an appropriate calculus
course numbered V63.0121 or
above, with the permission of the
department. Qualified students may
also take a special exemption examination given by the MAP office.
CALCULUS PLACEMENT
Students with a precalculus or a high
school calculus course with a grade
of B or better can enter Calculus I,
V63.0121. Students who did not
receive a grade of B or better in precalculus or calculus are advised to
take Precalculus, V63.0009. Students with four years of high school
mathematics with a grade of B in
calculus may enter Intensive Calcu-
MATHEMAT ICS
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199
lus, V63.0221. Those who need
additional mathematical preparation
are required to take Mathematical
Thinking, V63.0005.
ADVANCED PLACEMENT
WITH CREDIT
Freshmen seeking advanced placement in mathematics may take the
AB or BC Advanced Placement
Examination in Mathematics given
by the College Entrance Examination
Board. A student who receives a
grade of 4 or better on the AB test in
calculus is placed into Calculus II,
V63.0122, and receives 4 points of
Degree
Requirements
MATHEMATICS MAJOR
Present requirements: Twelve 4point courses numbered V63.0120 or
higher (with the exception of
V63.0235) that must include both
Advanced Calculus I (V63.0325) and
Algebra I (V63.0343). The rest of
the 12 required courses must include
one of the following: Advanced Calculus II, V63.0326; Algebra II,
V63.0344, or Vector Analysis
V63.0224. The sequence Intensive
Calculus I and II, V63.0221, 0222,
is counted as three courses; it covers
the same material as Calculus I, II,
and III. Any two computer science
courses numbered V22.0101 or
higher may be credited toward the
12-course requirement. Students
enrolled in the premedical or predental program and who wish to major
in mathematics may subsitute at
most two math classes by any two of
the following: General Physics I and
II, V85.0011, 0012; Physics I, II,
V85.0091, 0093; or any two computer science courses number
V22.0101 or higher.
Courses taken under the pass/fail
option are not counted toward the
major. A grade of C or better is
required in all courses used to fulfill
the major requirement.
HONORS PROGRAM
The honors program is designed for
students with a strong commitment
to mathematics. It is recommended
for those who intend to pursue graduate study in mathematics. Course
requirements include Advanced Calculus I, II, V63.0325, 0326, and
Algebra I, II, V63.0343, 0344, both
usually taken during the junior year;
200
•
MATHEMATICS
college credit in lieu of Calculus I,
V63.0121. A student who receives a
4 or better on the BC test in calculus
is placed into Calculus III,
V63.0123, and receives 8 points of
college credit in lieu of V63.0121
and V63.0122.
ADVANCED PLACEMENT
WITHOUT CREDIT
The department also gives Advanced
Placement Exams periodically for
those students who know the material in V63.0121 and/or V63.0122
and who wish to proceed with
V63.0122 or V63.0123. If a student
and Honors I, II, V63.0393, 0394,
usually taken during the senior year.
With departmental approval, completion of two approved graduate
courses in mathematics may be
accepted in place of Honors I, II. It is
recommended that potential honors
students register for Intensive Calculus I, II, V63.0221, 0222. Students
must also complete a senior “project”
under individual faculty supervision.
The requirements for admission
into the honors program are (1) a
grade point average of 3.5 or better
in V63.0123 and V63.0124 or the
equivalent, (2) a grade point average
of 3.5 in overall course work, and (3)
approval of the director of the honors
program. For general requirements,
please see under Honors and Awards.
JOINT MAJOR IN
MATHEMATICS AND
COMPUTER SCIENCE
This is an interdisciplinary major
offered jointly by the Departments of
Mathematics (63) and Computer Science (22). It provides the opportunity to study both computer science
and such relevant mathematics as
analysis, algebra, probability, and statistics. The requirements are (1) 10
4-point courses numbered V63.0120
or higher from the Department of
Mathematics, including both
Advanced Calculus I (V63.0325) and
Algebra I (V63.0343) and one
restricted math requirement
(Advanced Calculus II, V63.0326;
Algebra II, V63.0344; or Vector
Analysis, V63.0224) and (2) eight
computer science courses as required
for the joint major in that department.
passes either of these exams, he or
she is placed into the next course of
the sequence; no college credit is
given for the courses that are skipped.
DEPARTMENTAL
ADVISEMENT
All mathematics majors are required
to see an undergraduate adviser to
review their course of study and to
obtain advice on the appropriate
courses each term. Students should
inquire at the department office,
Warren Weaver Hall, 251 Mercer
Street, Room 705, (212) 998-3005,
to make an appointment.
JOINT MAJOR IN
MATHEMATICS AND
ECONOMICS
An interdisciplinary major is offered
jointly by the Departments of Mathematics (63) and Economics (31). It
provides the opportunity to take
courses in economics and in mathematics and computer science. The
requirements are (1) Mathematics:
nine 4-point courses numbered
V63.0120 or higher that must
include Advanced Calculus I, II
(V63.0325, 0326). The computer
science course Introduction to Computer Science I, V22.0101, may be
credited toward the nine-course
requirement. (2) Economics:
V31.0005, V31.0006, V31.0011,
V31.0013, V31.0020, V31.0266,
plus any three economics elective
courses, at least two of which must
be theory electives numbered
V31.0300 to 0399.
Interested students should consult with the director of undergraduate studies in each department for
additional information.
JOINT B.S./B.E. PROGRAM
WITH STEVENS INSTITUTE
OF TECHNOLOGY
The department offers a joint
B.S./B.E. program with Stevens
Institute of Technology. Students in
the program receive the B.S. degree
in mathematics from New York University and the B.E. degree from
Stevens Institute in either computer,
electrical, or mechanical engineering.
The joint math/engineering students
must complete the 12-course math
requirement. Students are allowed to
take Differential Equation, MA221;
Activities and
Awards
Courses
and/or Complex Variables, MA234
at Stevens Institute, which are equivalent to V63.0262 and V63.0282,
respectively. Students are also
allowed to substitute Computer Science I, II, V22.0101, 0102, or
Physics I and II, V85.0091, 0093 for
a maximum of two math classes.
Further information is available from
Joseph Hemmes or Aara Menzi, the
co-coordinators of the B.S./B.E. program, in the College Advising
Center, Silver Center, 100 Washington Square East, Room 905,
(212) 998-3133.
MATHEMATICS MINOR
Mathematics Club: An active club
is open to all students interested in
the study of mathematics. An organizational meeting is held shortly
after classes begin in the fall to plan
for the coming academic year. Activities include talks by faculty and
guest speakers on a variety of topics
including career opportunities.
Pi Mu Epsilon: The department
has a chapter of Pi Mu Epsilon, the
national honorary society for students of mathematics. Membership
requirements are as follows: Four
courses in mathematics, numbered
V63.0120 or higher; at least 60 college credits; GPA 3.0 or more; math
GPA 3.5 or more. Transfer students
must be at New York University for
a year or more. Applications for
membership are available from the
department.
William Lowell Putnam Competition: The Department of Mathematics participates in the annual
William Lowell Putnam Competi-
tion, a mathematics contest open to
all undergraduate mathematics students in the United States and Canada. Interested students should contact
the department as early as possible in
the school year—the contest takes
place in early December.
Awards: The department’s
awards include the Sidney Roth
Prize, the Hollis Cooley Memorial
Prize, and the Perley Thorne Medal.
Please see the descriptions under
Honors and Awards in this bulletin.
Mathematical Thinking
V63.0005 This course is intended as
preparation for further study for students
with weak math backgrounds. 4 points.
Develops an intuitive “number
sense,” computational skills, an intuitive sense of space, pattern recognition, and analytic thought processes.
Topics include arithmetic operations,
percentages, proportions, measurements, exponents, roots, and basic
geometric concepts. Topics in basic
algebra come next: linear equations
and their graphs, systems of equations, polynomials, quadratic equations and their graphs, and functions. Practical applications are
included according to the interests of
the students and instructor. Recommended as a review of basic concepts.
rithmic, and trigonometric functions
and their graphs.
pling, mean, variance, standard deviation, statistical tests, and estimation.
Games of Chance
V63.0011 Prerequisite: V63.0005 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Elementary probability from the
point of view of games and gambling. Topics include probability,
expectation, introduction to game
theory, gambler’s ruin, gambling systems, and optimal strategies. Examples from games of chance including
backgammon, blackjack, craps, and
poker.
Algebra and Calculus with
Applications to Business and
Economics
V63.0017 Prerequisite: V63.0009
with a grade of C or better, or permission
of the department. Appropriate for students in business, business education, and
public administration. A student will
receive credit for both V63.0017 and
V63.0121 only when V63.0017 is
taken before V63.0121. 4 points.
Derivatives, antiderivatives, and
integrals of functions of one real variable. Logarithmic and exponential
functions. Functions of several variables and partial derivatives. Maxima
and minima. Integration.
Precalculus Mathematics
V63.0009 Prerequisite: V63.0005 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Intensive course in intermediate
algebra and trigonometry. Topics
include algebraic, exponential, loga-
Requirements: Four 4-point courses
in the department numbered
V63.0120 or higher. Students in
areas where mathematics courses are
required as part of their major may
satisfy the minor as long as two of
the four courses do not apply simultaneously to the requirements for the
major. At most two mathematics
courses in the minor may be transferred from other colleges.
Courses taken under the pass/fail
option are not counted toward the
minor. A grade of C or better is
required in all courses applying to
the minor.
Elementary Statistics
V63.0012 Prerequisite: V63.0005 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
The purpose of the course is to
understand and use statistical methods. Mathematical theory is minimized. Actual survey and experimental data are analyzed. Computations
are done with desk or pocket calculators. Topics: description of data,
elementary probability, random sam-
Advisers are available for consultation on minor requirements before
and during registration. Students
should consult an adviser if they have
any doubt about which courses fulfill
their requirements.
JOINT MATHEMATICS AND
COMPUTER SCIENCE
MINOR
The requirements are the four courses V63.0121, V63.0122, V22.0101,
and V22.0102. A grade of C or better is required for the mathematics
courses; see also under Computer
Science (22) in this bulletin.
Discrete Mathematics
V63.0120 Prerequisite: V63.0121
with a grade of C or better, or permission
of the department. 4 points.
A first course in discrete mathematics. Sets, algorithms, and induction.
MATHEMAT ICS
•
201
Combinatorics. Graphs and trees.
Combinatorial circuits. Logic and
Boolean algebra.
CALCULUS TRACKS
Two calculus tracks are available—
the standard track Calculus I, II, III
(V63.0121-0123) and the intensive
track (V63.0221-0222). Both cover
roughly the same material in the same
depth. The two courses V63.02210222 count as the equivalent of three
mathematics courses. It is neither
advised nor encouraged to switch
tracks; a student who intends to take
the full calculus sequence should be
prepared to continue on the same
track for the whole sequence.
Calculus I
V63.0121 Prerequisite: V63.0009
with a grade of C or better or permission
of the department. 4 points.
Derivatives, antiderivatives, and integrals of functions of one variable.
Applications include graphing, maximizing, and minimizing functions.
Definite integrals and the fundamental theorem of calculus.
Calculus II
V63.0122 Prerequisite: a grade of C or
better in V63.0121 or equivalent, or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Integration by substitution, partial
fractions, numerical integration,
areas, volume, arc length, infinite
sequences, complex numbers, fourier
series, ODE, partial fractions.
Calculus III
V63.0123 Prerequisite: a grade of C or
better in V63.0121 or equivalent, or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Calculus of several variables. Vectors
in the plane and space. Partial derivatives with applications. Double and
triple integrals. Spherical and cylindrical coordinates. Surface and line
integrals. Vector analysis. Green’s
theorem and the divergence theorem.
Linear Algebra
V63.0140 Formerly V63.0124. Prerequisite: a grade of C or better in
V63.0121 or equivalent. 4 points.
Systems of linear equations. Gaussian
elimination, matrices, determinants,
and Cramer’s rule. Vectors, vector
spaces, basis and dimension, linear
transformations. Eigenvalues, eigenvectors, quadratic forms.
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•
MATHEMATICS
Intensive Linear Algebra I
V63.0141 Identical to G63.2110.
Prerequisite: A grade of B or better in
V63.0123 or the equivalent. 4 points.
Linear spaces, subspaces, and quotient spaces; linear dependence and
independence; basis and dimension.
Linear transformation and matricaes;
dual spaces and transposition.
Solving linear equations. Determinants. Quadratic forms and their
relation to local extrema of multivariable functions.
Intensive Linear Algebra II
V63.0142 Identical to G63.2120.
Prerequisite: V63.0141. 4 points.
Special theory, eigenvalues, and
eigenvectors; Jordan canonical forms.
Inner product and orthogonality.
Self-adjoint mappings, matrix
inequalities. Normal linear spaces
and linear transformation between
them positive matrices. Applications.
Intensive Calculus I, II
V63.0221 and V63.0222 Prerequisite: permission of the department.
Includes recitation section. 5 points each
term.
Covers the same material as
V63.0121-0123, but at a faster pace.
Appropriate for science, mathematics, and computer science majors.
V63.0221 covers differential and
integral calculus of one variable,
with applications, and the elementary transcendental functions.
V63.0222 includes techniques of
integration, infinite series, and the
calculus of several variables with
applications. Calculators or computers are used.
Vector Analysis
V63.0224 Identical to G63.1002.
Prerequisite: a grade of C+ or better in
both V63.0123 and V63.0140.
4 points.
Functions of several variables. Partial
derivatives, chain rule, change of
variables. Lagrange multipliers.
Inverse and implicit function theorems. Vector calculus: divergence,
gradient, and curl; theorems of
Gauss, Green, and Stokes with applications to fluids, gravity, electromagnetism, and the like. Introduction to
differential forms. Degree and fixed
points of mappings with applications. Additional topics depending
on the interests of the class, as time
permits.
Theory of Probability
V63.0233 Prerequisite: a grade of C or
better in V63.0123 or equivalent.
4 points.
Introduction to the mathematical
techniques of random phenomena
occurring in the natural, physical,
and social sciences. Axioms of mathematical probability, combinatorial
analysis, binomial distribution,
Poisson and normal approximation,
random variables and probability
distributions, generating functions,
Markov chains, applications.
Mathematical Statistics
V63.0234 Prerequisite: a grade of C or
better in V63.0123 and V63.0233 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Introduction to the mathematical
foundations and techniques of modern statistical analysis used in the
interpretation of data in quantitative
sciences. Mathematical theory of
sampling; normal populations and
distributions; chi-square, t, and F
distributions; hypothesis testing;
estimation; confidence intervals;
sequential analysis; correlation,
regression, and analysis of variance.
Applications.
Probability and Statistics
V63.0235 Prerequisite: a grade of C or
better in V63.0122 or the equivalent.
4 points.
A combination of V63.0233 and
V63.0234 at a more elementary level
so as to acquaint the student with
both probability and statistics in a
single term. In probability: mathematical treatment of chance; combinatorics; binomial, Poisson, and
Gaussian distributions; law of large
numbers and the normal distribution; application to coin-tossing,
radioactive decay, etc. In statistics:
sampling; normal and other useful
distributions; testing of hypotheses;
confidence intervals; correlation and
regression; applications to scientific,
industrial, and financial data.
Combinatorics
V63.0240 Prerequisite: V63.0122 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Techniques for counting and enumeration, including generating
functions, the principle of inclusion
and exclusion, and Polya counting.
Graph theory. Modern algorithms
and data structures for graph theoretic problems.
Logic
V63.0245 Prerequisite: V63.0122 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Propositional calculus, quantification
theory, and properties of axiomatic
systems. Introduction to set theory.
Computability and its applications
to the incompleteness theorem.
Theory of Numbers
V63.0248 Prerequisite: V63.0122 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Divisibility and prime numbers. Linear and quadratic congruences. The
classical number-theoretic functions.
Continued fractions. Diophantine
equations.
Mathematics of Finance
V63.0250 Prerequisite: a grade of C+
or better in V63.0121 or equivalent,
plus V63.0140. 4 points.
Introduction to the mathematics of
finance. Topics: linear programming
with application to pricing. Interest
rates and present value. Basic probability, random walks, central limit
theorem, Brownian motion, log-normal model of stock prices. BlackScholes theory of options. Dynamic
programming with application to
portfolio optimization. Students use
MatLab to do simulations and solve
practical problems (no prior programming experience required).
Introduction to Mathematical
Modeling
V63.0251 Prerequisites: V63.01210123 or permission of the instructor.
4 points.
Formulation and analysis of mathematical models. Mathematical tools
include dimensional analysis, optimization, simulation, probability,
and elementary differential equations. Applications to biology, economics, other areas of science. The
necessary mathematical and scientific
background is developed as needed.
Students participate in formulating
models as well as in analyzing them.
Mathematics in Medicine and
Biology
V63.0255 Identical to G23.1501.
Prerequisites: V63.0121 and V23.0011
or permission of the instructor. 4 points.
Intended primarily for premedical
students with interest and ability in
mathematics. Topics of medical
importance using mathematics as a
tool: control of the heart, optimal
principles in the lung, cell membranes, electrophysiology, counter-
current exchange in the kidney, acidbase balance, muscle, cardiac
catheterization, and computer diagnosis. Material from the physical sciences is introduced as needed and
developed within the course.
Computers in Medicine and
Biology
V63.0256 Identical to G23.1502.
Prerequisite: V63.0255 or permission of
the instructor. Familiarity with a programming language such as Pascal,
FORTRAN, or BASIC is recommended.
4 points.
Introduces the student of biology or
mathematics to the use of computers
as tools for modeling physiological
phenomena. The student constructs
two computer models selected from
the following list: circulation, gas
exchange in the lung, control of cell
volume, and the renal countercurrent
mechanism. The student then uses
the model to conduct simulated
physiological experiments.
Ordinary Differential Equations
V63.0262 Prerequisites: V63.0123
and V63.0124 or equivalent. 4 points.
First- and second-order equations.
Series solutions. Laplace transforms.
Introduction to partial differential
equations and Fourier series.
Partial Differential Equations
V63.0263 Prerequisite: V63.0262 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Many laws of physics are formulated
as partial differential equations. This
course discusses the simplest examples of such laws as embodied in the
wave equation, the diffusion equation,
and Laplace’s equation. Nonlinear
conservation laws and the theory of
shock waves. Applications to physics,
chemistry, biology, and population
dynamics.
Chaos and Dynamical Systems
V63.0264 Prerequisite: a grade of B or
better in V63.0121 or equivalent.
4 points.
Topics include fixed points of onedimensional maps; linear operators
and linear approximations; stability
and bifurcation; logistic maps. Cantor set, fractal sets, symbolic dynamics, conjugacy of maps. Dynamics in
two dimensions. Introduction for
students with little preparation to
the recent discovery that, in certain
regimes, fully deterministic mechanics can produce chaotic behavior.
Transformations and Geometries
V63.0270 Prerequisite: V63.0122 or
equivalent. 4 points.
Axiomatic and algebraic study of
Euclidean, non-Euclidean, affine, and
projective geometries. Special attention is given to group-theoretic
methods.
Topology
V63.0275 Prerequisite: V63.0325 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Metric spaces, topological spaces,
compactness, connectedness. Covering spaces and homotopy groups.
Functions of a Complex Variable
V63.0282 Prerequisites: V63.0122,
plus any higher-level course or equivalent.
4 points.
Complex numbers and complex
functions. Differentiation and the
Cauchy-Riemann equations. Cauchy’s
theorem and the Cauchy integral formula. Singularities, residues, Taylor
and Laurent series. Fractional linear
transformations and conformal mapping. Analytic continuation.
Advanced Calculus I
V63.0325 Prerequisites: V63.0123
and V63.0124 or equivalent. 4 points.
The real number system. Convergence of sequences and series. Rigorous study of functions of one real
variable. Continuity, connectedness,
compactness, metric spaces.
Advanced Calculus II
V63.0326 Prerequisite: V63.0325 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
Rigorous study of functions of several
variables. Limits and continuity. Differentiable functions. The implicit
function theorem. Transformation of
multiple integrals. Riemann integral.
Algebra I
V63.0343 Prerequisites: V63.0123
and V63.0124 or equivalent. 4 points.
Groups, homomorphisms, automorphisms, and permutation groups.
Rings, ideals and quotient rings,
Euclidean rings, and polynomial
rings.
Algebra II
V63.0344 Prerequisite: V63.0343.
4 points.
Extension fields and roots of polynomials. Construction with straight
edge and compass. Elements of
Galois theory.
MATHEMAT ICS
•
203
Differential Geometry
V63.0377 Prerequisite: V63.0326 or
permission of the department. 4 points.
The differential properties of curves
and surfaces. Introduction to manifolds and Riemannian geometry.
Honors I, II
V63.0393-0394 Prerequisite: approval
of the director of the honors program.
4 points per term.
Lecture-seminar course on advanced
topics selected by the instructor and
students. Topics vary yearly. Detailed
course descriptions are available during preregistration.
Special Topics I and II
V63.0395-0396 4 points per term.
Covers topics not offered regularly:
experimental courses and courses
offered on student demand. Detailed
course descriptions are circulated to
advisers before courses are offered.
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•
MATHEMATICS
Independent Study
V63.0997-0998 Prerequisite: permission of the department. 2 or 4 points per
term.
To register for this course, a student
must complete an application form
for Independent Study and have it
approved by a faculty sponsor and
the director of undergraduate studies.
Numerical Methods G63.2010,
2020
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Real Variables G63.2430, 2440
Qualified students may take certain
courses in the Graduate School of
Arts and Science provided they first
obtain permission from both undergraduate and graduate departmental
advisers. A few such courses are listed below. If these courses are offered
toward fulfillment of the requirement for the baccalaureate degree, no
advanced credit is allowed for them
in the graduate school.
Scientific Computing G63.2043
Algebra G63.2130-2140
Number Theory G63.2210, 2220
Topology G63.2310, 2320
Complex Variables G63.2450,
2460
Introduction to Applied
Mathematics G63.2701, 2702
Mathematical Topics in Biology
G63.2850, 2851
Probability G63.2911, 2912
PROGRAM IN
Medieval and Renaissance
Studies (65)
T H E M E D I E VA L A N D R E N A I S S A N C E C E N T E R , 7 2 6 B R O A D WA Y, R O O M 6 2 8 ,
NEW YORK, NY 10003-9580. (212) 998-8698.
DIRECTOR OF THE
P RO G R A M:
Professor Ivry
Faculty
T
he undergraduate Program in Medieval and Renaissance Studies is part of the
Medieval and Renaissance Center (MARC). It focuses on the history, institutions, languages, literatures, thought, faith, art, and music of Europe and the Mediterranean
world from the collapse of Roman authority to about 1600 C.E. It is during this important
period—which shaped and transmitted the classical heritage—that the social, artistic, intellectual, and scientific culture of present-day Europe and the Middle East was formed.
The curriculum in medieval and Renaissance studies links undergraduates with
NYU’s outstanding humanities faculty, with the superb libraries, museums, and collections
in the New York area, and with musical and theatrical performances of works from this period that are given regularly in the city. It also enriches students’ intellectual and artistic experience in CAS Programs Abroad. Students design their own programs in consultation with
the program director and faculty: they thus experience the intimate guidance of a center of
excellence within the parameters of a great university.
Professors Emeriti:
Cantor (History), Oliva (History),
Raymo (English)
Professors:
Alexander (Fine Arts), Beaujour
(French), Bonfante (Classics),
Boorman (Music), Weil-Garris
Brandt (Fine Arts), Carruthers (English), Chazan (Hebrew and Judaic
Studies), Claster (History), Dinshaw
(English/ Women’s Studies), Freccero
(Italian), Gans (Chemistry), Gilman
(English), Guillory (English),
Hyman (Fine Arts), Ivry (Hebrew
and Judaic Studies), Javitch (Com-
Program
OBJECTIVES
The program offers an interdisciplinary approach to the civilization and
culture of the Middle Ages and the
Renaissance. It is specifically designed
for students wishing to work in more
than one field of specialization and to
develop majors around their own
interests rather than those of a departmental major. Individual advisement
parative Literature), Johnson (History), Krinsky (Fine Arts), Kupperman
(History), Low (English), Martinez
(Spanish and Portuguese), Matthews
(Fine Arts), Mitsis (Classics), Peters
(Middle Eastern Studies), Regalado
(French), Reiss (Comparative Literature), Roesner (Music), Rubenstein
(Hebrew and Judaic Studies), Sandler
(Fine Arts), Vitz (French), Wolfson
(Hebrew and Judaic Studies)
Associate Professors:
Crabtree (Anthropology), Dopico
Black (Spanish and Portuguese),
Erspamer (Italian), Feros (History),
enables students to develop a coherent
course of study that suits their needs
and interests. The fields of specialization from which students may draw
to develop their programs currently
include (1) language and literature:
classics, comparative literature, English, French, Italian, Middle Eastern
(Arabic), Hebrew and Judaic, and
Spanish and Portuguese; (2) fine arts;
MEDIEVAL
AND
Hoover (English), Krabbenhoft
(Spanish and Portuguese), Marincola
(Classics), Momma (English), Ross
(Spanish and Portuguese), Zezula
(French)
Assistant Professors:
Ardizzone (Italian), Baun (History/
Hellenic Studies), Flood (Fine Arts),
Geronimus (Fine Arts), Husain
(Middle Eastern Studies), Kennedy
(Middle Eastern Studies), Rust
(English), Salzman (Middle Eastern
Studies), Smith (Fine Arts)
(3) history; (4) music; and (5) philosophy and religion.
Available to majors and minors is
the Marco Polo Travel Award, which
is granted to an outstanding student
each year to allow her or him to travel
abroad for research.
Majors in this program have gone
on to graduate work in medieval
studies, Celtic studies, archival stud-
RENAISSANCE
STUDIES
•
205
ies, religious studies, history, art history, and English, as well as to professional schools. Other majors have
gone on to careers in business and in
education.
gram in Medieval and Renaissance
Studies. All major and minor programs require the approval of the
director of the program.
HONORS PROGRAM
MAJOR
The director is happy to discuss with
students their general educational and
career aims as well as the specific
opportunities provided by the Pro-
The general requirements for departmental honors are outlined in the
Honors and Awards section of this
bulletin. In addition, students wishing to receive their degree with honors in medieval and Renaissance
studies are required to complete a
satisfactory thesis on a topic of their
choice demonstrating their ability to
control the relevant sources, bibliography, and methodology.
Students who meet the general
College requirements must seek written approval of the director of the
program before beginning the senior
thesis—an essay of 30 to 60 pages on
a research topic—at which time a
thesis director will be chosen. Once
the topic has been defined, the student will meet with the thesis director to discuss bibliography and
research plans. Students will normally
take one independent study during
the course of the research and writing
of the thesis. The independent study
course will be supervised by the thesis director and may not replace any
of the primary or secondary concentration requirements for the major.
Deadlines for completing the honors
thesis are the following: the thesis
The following is a sampling of
courses specifically designed for the
Program in Medieval and Renaissance
Studies.
the Renaissance; Renaissance Monarchy; Medieval and Renaissance Travel
Journals; The Structure of Knowledge
in the Renaissance.
Interdisciplinary Seminar in
Medieval and Renaissance Studies
V65.0991, 0992 4 points.
Each semester, the course is devoted
to a topic chosen for its interdisciplinary character. Recent topics have
included The Bible in the Middle
Ages; Millenarianism; 1497-1498:
The Renaissance at Full Tilt; Visions
of Medieval History; The Age of
Chivalry; The World of the Celts;
The World of Charlemagne; Journey
in Medieval Christian Theology;
Interpreting the Medieval World;
The 12th-Century Renaissance; The
Classical Tradition in the Middle
Ages; Christian Culture in the Middle Ages; Literature and Culture of
Studies in Medieval Culture
V65.0985, 0986 4 points.
This course, varying in content from
term to term, focuses on special
themes. Recent offerings include
Medieval Peasantry; Medieval Architecture at the Cloisters; The
Medieval Manuscript and the Book
of Hours; Medieval Theatre; The
Wisdom Tradition; Medieval Literature in the Movies; Law and Moral
Issues in Medieval Philosophy; Martyrs, Mystics, and Prophets; Happiness in the Christian Middle Ages;
The Medieval Book: Materials,
Forms, and Uses; Two Medieval
Minds.
Ten courses in medieval and Renaissance studies, of which at least five
must be in a single field of concentration; four or, preferably, three
courses in one or more other fields of
concentration; and one or, preferably,
two courses in an interdisciplinary
seminar. In addition, students are
expected to show proficiency through
course work or examination in Latin
(or another language central to their
area, such as ancient Greek, Arabic,
or Hebrew) and in one other language appropriate to the field of concentration.
MINOR
Five courses, of which at least two
must be in a single field of concentration, one in each of two other
fields of concentration, and an interdisciplinary seminar.
PROGRAM APPROVAL AND
ADVISEMENT
Courses
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STUDIES
outline and bibliography are due one
month after the opening date of the
term; the completed first draft is due
two months after the opening of the
term; the completed final draft is due
three weeks before the end of the
term. This schedule enables students
to compete for awards, honors, and
fellowships.
STUDY ABROAD
MARC prepares and encourages its
students to complement their work
in medieval and Renaissance studies
at one of NYU’s Study Abroad programs in Florence, London, Madrid,
Paris, and Prague or at one of the
Western European exchange universities. For course information, see
“Electives,” below.
ACCELERATED B.A./M.A.
PROGRAM
Qualifying students may apply to
earn an accelerated B.A. in medieval
and Renaissance Studies and M.A. in
a related department. Interested students must consult with the director
of the program. Requirements for the
B.A./M.A. Program are outlined in
the Preprofessional, Accelerated, and
Specialized Programs section of this
bulletin.
Studies in Renaissance Culture
V65.0995, 0996 4 points.
This course, varying in content from
term to term, focuses on special
themes. Recent offerings include
Love in the Renaissance; French
Women Writers of the Middle Ages
and the Renaissance; Classics in the
Middle Ages and Renaissance; Pagan
Mythology in the Middle Ages and
Renaissance; Renaissance Philosophy;
Renaissance 2000 (Telecourse).
Topics in Medieval Studies
V65.0983, 0984 2 points.
This course, varying in content from
term to term, focuses on special
themes. Recent offerings include
Tolkien and Lewis: The Medievalist’s
Answer to Modernism; The Kiss;
Gothic Romance; Music and Cosmology; Poets, Patrons, and Public
in Medieval Lyric; Gender Issues in
the Art of the Middle Ages; Myths
and Legends of the Middle Ages;
Doomsday: The Last Judgment in
Medieval Culture; Medieval Minstrels; Angels; Sexual Transgression
in the Middle Ages and Renaissance;
Saints: Lore and Legend; The Troubadours: Lyrics, Love, and War; Early
Irish Art; The Middle Ages at the
Movies; The Medieval Book (held at
the Pierpont Morgan Library).
Topics in Renaissance Studies
V65.0993, 0994 2 points.
This course, varying in content from
term to term, focuses on special
themes. Recent offerings include The
Court Masque and Renaissance Politics; Material Culture of the Renaissance; Renaissance Fools and Foolery;
Shakespeare and Chivalry; A Renaissance of Curiosity: Travel Books,
Maps, and Marvels; The Printed
Book in the Renaissance (held at the
New York Public Library).
Note: Normally two of these 2point courses must be taken to constitute a full 4-point course fulfilling
requirements for the major.
Acting Medieval Literature
V65.0868 Identical to V45.0868,
H28.0732. Vitz. 4 points.
This course presents medieval literature as a set of springboards to performance rather than as a series of
“books” to be read. In this strongly
performance-oriented course, students approach this “literature” as
works that were acted out, sung, and
narrated from memory as part of a
storytelling tradition. Students are
invited to draw on their dramatic
and musical skills and interests, and
stage medieval works. For their final
project, students participate in staging and putting on a play; perform a
substantial piece of narrative poetry;
or sing or play a body of medieval
songs; etc. Works studied/performed
include songs of the troubadours and
trouvères; The Song of Roland; Chrétien de Troyes’s romance, Yvain;
French fabliaux; Sir Gawain and the
Green Knight.
The Arthurian Legend
V65.0800 Identical to V29.0825,
V41.0717, V45.0813, V90.0800.
4 points.
Beginning with early stories of King
Arthur and the knights of the Round
Table, the course focuses on masterpieces of French, English, and German medieval literature. Through
the European literary tradition, students examine larger problems of the
development of medieval literature:
the conception of history, the rise of
the romance genre, the themes of
courtly love, the code of chivalry, and
philosophical and theological questions as the Arthurian material is
developed through the stories of the
Holy Grail.
The Civilization and Culture of
the Middle Ages
V65.0011 Identical to V57.0011.
Johnson. 4 points.
Concentrates on the culture of
medieval Europe, a world that produced castles and crusades, cathedrals
and tapestries, mystery plays and
epics, and plainsong and philosophy.
Examines the richness and diversity
of medieval creativity through lectures, class discussions, literature,
slides, and museum visits.
The Culture and Literature of the
Renaissance
V65.0311 Identical to V45.0311.
Zezula. 4 points.
Concentrates on the culture of
Renaissance Europe. Examines the
richness and diversity of Renaissance
creativity through lectures, class discussions, literature, and slides.
Dante and His World
V65.0801 Identical to V41.0143 and
V59.0160. 4 points.
Interdisciplinary introduction to late
medieval culture, using Dante, its
foremost literary artist, as a focus.
Attention not only to the literature,
art, and music, but also to the political, religious, and social developments of the time as well as to new
philosophical and scientific currents.
Emphasizes the continuity of the
Western tradition, especially the
classical backgrounds of medieval
culture and its transmission to the
modern world. Cinematic re-creations, documentaries, other visual
aids, and museum trips.
Medieval Mysticism
V65.0360 4 points.
In Western religion, mysticism
describes the union of the individual
soul with God. Topics include the
structure of mystical ascent; the role
of asceticism and prayer in mystical
experience; the underlying unity of
Christian mysticism; Kabbalah and
Sufism; mysticism and gender; and
similarities and differences between
Western and Eastern mysticism (TaoMEDIEVAL
AND
ism, Vedanta, and Zen Buddhism).
Texts are drawn from Christian, Jewish, and Islamic traditions, stressing
the great works of the Christian mystical tradition that culminated in
16th-century Spain.
The Medieval and Renaissance
Love Lyric
V65.0420 4 points.
The courtly love lyric, one of the
most enduring genres of Western
literature, portrayed love as an experience ranging from a degrading
passion to an ennobling force, often
crucial to poetic inspiration. The
course traces the medieval love lyric
from its beginnings in 11th-century
Provençal through its developments
in Latin, German, Italian, French,
Spanish, Portuguese, and English.
Examines how the themes and conventions of this lyric are transformed
in the Renaissance by such major
love poets as Petrarch, Sidney, Shakespeare, and Donne.
Medieval Theatre
V65.0712 4 points.
Survey of medieval theatre in Europe,
the plays and their contexts in the
church, courts, and Carnival. A study
of the plays themselves, ranging from
mystery plays to farces and a look at
techniques of staging and accounts of
festive celebrations. Includes videos
and attendance at live performances.
Texts taught in translation.
Medieval Christian Theology
V65.0510 Identical to V90.0510.
4 points.
Study of the texts of Augustine,
Anselm, Bonaventure, and Thomas
Aquinas on major theological and
philosophical themes: the Trinity,
proofs for the existence of God, salvation, and the influences of Neoplatonism and Islamic thought.
Medieval Technology and
Everyday Life
V65.0003 Gans. 2 points.
Gives a tour of the mills, factories,
schools, travel technology, cathedral
builders, miners, merchants, masons,
weavers, and nobles of the Middle
Ages. Examines the impact of new
technology on the lives of both the
rich and the ordinary, men, women,
and children, and on medieval beliefs
and politics. Also looks at the start of
the process that propelled Western
Europe from a pastoral backwater to
the dominant region of the globe.
No background in medieval history
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or science/technology is needed for
this course.
write a substantial report for 1-4 points
of academic credit for independent study.
Passion and Desire in the
Middle Ages
V65.0961 Identical to V29.0961,
V45.0214, V90.0250. Vitz. 2 points.
Study of the kinds of loves and
desires portrayed in medieval literature: passionate love, refined “courtly” love, sexual or “carnal” love; love
of kin; love of country; love of God.
Discusses how literary genres can be
largely defined by the nature of the
desires represented, explores
medieval theorists’ views of human
love, and investigates the conflicts
among different kinds of love for
medieval people.
ELECTIVES
Philosophy in the Middle Ages
V65.0060 Identical to V83.0025.
4 points.
Study of major medieval philosophers, their issues, schools, and current philosophic interests. Includes,
among others, Augustine, Anselm,
Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and
William of Ockham.
The Saints: Lore and Legend
V65.0365 Identical to V45.0365.
Vitz. 2 points.
Focuses on the saint as a major figure
in Western culture. Examines definitions of holiness and models of sanctity in the Old and New Testaments
and in the early Christian church and
then explores the important role
played by saints in medieval culture
and beyond. Topics considered: the
theology of devotion to the saints
and to the Virgin Mary in Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy, determination of sainthood, and gender
differences among saints. Uses literary, historical, artistic, and religious
documents.
Independent Study
V65.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: written
permission of the director of the program.
Counts toward majors and minors only.
May not duplicate the content of a regularly scheduled course. 1 to 4 points per
term.
Internships
V65.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: written
permission of the director of the program.
Counts toward majors and minors only.
Majors and minors may find internships
that can be related to medieval and
Renaissance studies. A faculty director
will be appointed and the student will
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The following courses in individual
disciplines are regularly offered in
New York. They are cross-listed with
medieval and Renaissance studies
and can count toward its majors and
minors. Courses marked with an
asterisk (*) must be approved by the
director of the program to count
toward the major or minor. See
departments for course descriptions.
See the class directory for crosslisted electives offered through NYU
Study Abroad. Approval of the director of the program is required to
count other Study Abroad courses
toward the major or minor.
Shakespeare I, II
V65.0410, 0411 Identical to
V41.0410, 0411.
Colloquium: Shakespeare
V65.0415 Identical to V41.0415.
*17th-Century English Literature
V65.0440 Identical to V41.0440.
Colloquium: The Renaissance
Writer
V65.0445 Identical to V41.0445.
Colloquium: Milton
V65.0450 Identical to V41.0450.
Topics: Medieval Literature
V65.0953 Identical to V41.0950.
Topics: Renaissance Literature
V65.0954 Identical to V41.0951.
CLASSICS
Medieval Latin
V65.0824 Identical to V27.0824.
*Topics: 17th-Century British
Literature
V65.0955 Identical to V41.0952.
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
FINE ARTS
The Epic Poem: From Homer to
Milton
V65.0106 Identical to V29.0106.
*Art in the Islamic World
V65.0098 Identical to V43.0098.
Fiction Before the Novel
V65.0135 Identical to V29.0135.
Medieval Art
V65.0200 Identical to V43.0200.
Masterpieces of Renaissance
Literature
V65.0017 Identical to V29.0151.
Art of the Early Middle Ages
V65.0201 Identical to V43.0201.
Shakespeare’s Adaptations of His
Sources
V65.0155 Identical to V29.0155.
Romanesque Art
V65.0202 Identical to V43.0202.
Gothic Art in Northern Europe
V65.0203 Identical to V43.0203.
ENGLISH
*History of Drama and Theatre I
V65.0127 Identical to V41.0125 and
V30.0110.
British Literature I
V65.0210 Identical to V41.0210.
Medieval Visionary Literature
V65.0321 Identical to V41.0309.
Medieval Literature in Translation
V65.0310 Identical to V41.0310.
Colloquium: Chaucer
V65.0320 Identical to V41.0320.
The Renaissance in England
V65.0400 Identical to V41.0400.
RENAISSANCE
STUDIES
Italian Art 1200-1420: Before and
After the Black Death
V65.0204 Identical to V43.0204.
Renaissance Art
V65.0333 Identical to V43.0300.
European Architecture of the
Renaissance
V65.0301 Identical to V43.0301.
*Architecture in Europe in the
Age of Grandeur
V65.0302 Identical to V43.0302.
The Century of Jan van Eyck
V65.0303 Identical to V43.0303.
16th-Century Art North of the
Alps
V65.0304 Identical to V43.0304.
Italian Renaissance Sculpture
V65.0305 Identical to V43.0305.
The Jews: The Medieval Period
V65.0681 Identical to V78.0681.
Early Masters of Italian
Renaissance Painting
V65.0306 Identical to V43.0306.
HISTORY
The Age of Leonardo, Raphael,
and Michelangelo
V65.0307 Identical to V43.0307.
The Golden Age of Venetian
Painting
V65.0308 Identical to V43.0308.
French Art: Renaissance to
Rococo (1520-1770)
V65.0313 Identical to V43.0313.
ITALIAN
The Civilization of the Italian
Renaissance
V65.0161 Identical to V59.0161.
The Early Middle Ages
V65.0111 Identical to V57.0111.
Byzantine History
V65.0112 Identical to V57.0112.
The Crusades
V65.0113 Identical to V57.0113.
The Central Middle Ages
V65.0114 Identical to V57.0114.
Early Medieval Italy
V65.0120 Identical to V57.0120.
Italian Art in the Age of the
Baroque
V65.0314 Identical to V43.0309.
The Renaissance
V65.0121 Identical to V57.0121.
Dutch and Flemish Painting
1600-1700
V65.0311 Identical to V43.0311.
The Protestant and Catholic
Reformations
V65.0122 Identical to V57.0122.
*History of Western Art I
V65.0001 Identical to V43.0001.
Italy in the Age of Dante and
Petrarch
V65.0132 Identical to V57.0132.
Survey of Medieval and
Renaissance Literature
V65.0115 Identical to V59.0115.
Dante’s Divine Comedy
V65.0271 Identical to V59.0270.
Petrarch, Boccaccio, and the
Dawn of the Renaissance
V65.0274 Identical to V59.0271.
Petrarch and the Language of
Love
V65.0275 Identical to V59.0272.
LINGUISTICS
Etymology
V65.0076 Identical to V61.0076.
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
FRENCH
*Topics in French Culture
V65.0864 (in English), V65.0965
(in French) Identical to V45.0865 (in
English), V45.0965 (in French).
*Topics in French Literature
V65.0869 (in English), V65.0969
(in French) Identical to V45.0868 (in
English), V45.0968 (in French).
HEBREW AND JUDAIC STUDIES
Rabbinic and Medieval Hebrew
Literature
V65.0051 Identical to V78.0051.
Jewish Philosophy in the
Medieval World
V65.0425 Identical to V78.0425.
Christian-Jewish Relations in
Antiquity and the Middle Ages
V65.0119 Identical to V78.0215.
Foundations of the ChristianJewish Argument
V65.0160 Identical to V78.0161.
Jewish Mysticism and Hasidism
V65.0430 Identical to V78.0430.
The Golden Age of Spain,
1450-1700
V65.0138 Identical to V57.0138.
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
V65.0025 Identical to V77.0800,
V78.0160, and V90.0102.
The Making of the Muslim
Middle East, 600-1250
V65.0640 Identical to V77.0640.
Seminar: The Crusades and the
Crusader Kingdom in the Middle
Ages
V65.0265 Identical to V57.0265.
*The Ottoman Empire in World
History
V65.0651 Identical to V77.0650.
Seminar: Women in Medieval and
Renaissance Europe
V65.0270 Identical to V57.0270.
*Mediterranean Worlds
V65.0660 Identical to V77.0660,
V57.0131.
*Seminar: Topics in Early Modern
Europe
V65.0279 Identical to V57.0279.
*Muslim Societies
V65.0692 Identical to V77.0692.
Seminar: Topics in the
Renaissance
V65.0281 Identical to V57.0281.
*Islam and the West
V65.0694 Identical to V77.0694,
V57.0250.
*Masterpieces of Islamic
Literature in Translation
V65.0710 Identical to V77.0710.
IRISH STUDIES
Myths and Legends of the
Ancient Celts
V65.0761 Identical to V58.0307.
The Arabian Nights
V65.0714 Identical to V77.0716.
Medieval Ireland
V65.0405 Identical to V58.0308,
V57.0308, V41.0308.
The Sufis: Mystics of Islam
V65.0863 Identical to V90.0863 and
V77.0863.
*Seminar: Introduction to Islamic
Texts
V65.0720 Identical to V77.0720.
The Jews in Medieval Spain
V65.0913 Identical to V78.0113.
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*Seminar: Women and Islamic
Law
V65.0783 Identical to V77.0783.
Readings in Spanish Literature
Through the Golden Age
V65.0215 Identical to V95.0215.
MORSE ACADEMIC PLAN
Cervantes
V65.0335 Identical to V95.0371.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and Middle Ages
V55.0401
Forms of the Picaresque in Spain
and Spanish America
V65.0438 Identical to V95.0438.
Conversations of the West:
Antiquity and Renaissance
V55.0402
Theatre and Poetry of the
Spanish Golden Age
V65.0421 Identical to V95.0421.
World Cultures: Muslim Europe
V55.0520
World Cultures: Muslim Spain
V55.0527
MUSIC
Medieval and Renaissance Music
V65.0101 Identical to V71.0101.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
Themes and Forms of Medieval
Literature
G29.1452
PHYSICS
European Renaissance Literature I
G29.1500
Origins of Astronomy
V65.0008 Identical to V85.0008.
European Renaissance Literature II
G29.1550
FRENCH
Introduction to Medieval French
Literature
G45.1211
The Medieval Epic
G45.1241
Prose-Writers of the 16th Century
G45.1331
La Pléiade
G45.1342
MIDDLE EASTERN STUDIES
History of the Islamic Near East
to 1200
G77.1640
Medieval Iran
G77.1660
MUSIC
Collegium Musicum
G71.1001
SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
POLITICS
ENGLISH
*Topics in Premodern Political
Philosophy
V65.0110 Identical to V53.0110.
Introductory Old English
G41.1060
Introduction to Medieval Spanish
Literature
G95.1211
RELIGIOUS STUDIES
Introductory Middle English
G41.1061
16th-Century Novelistic Forms
G95.1334
Studies in Beowulf
G41.1152 Prerequisite G41.1060 or
the equivalent.
Spanish Poetry of the Renaissance
G95.1341
Varieties of Mystical Experience
V65.0240 Identical to V90.0240.
SPANISH AND PORTUGUESE
LANGUAGES AND LITERATURES
Chronicles and Travel Literature
of the Colonial World
V65.0273 Identical to V95.0273.
The Renaissance in England
G41.1322
Portuguese Literature: The
Cancioneiros to Camões
G87.1817
Shakespeare I, II
G41.1344,1345
*17th-Century Poetry
G41.1420
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Mystics and Contemplatives
G95.2311
STUDIES
PROGRAM IN
Metropolitan Studies (99)
2 8 5 M E R C E R S T R E E T, 7 T H F L O O R , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 0 7 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 0 9 0 .
DIRECTOR OF THE
P RO G R A M:
Professor Walkowitz
MANAGER OF
INTERNSHIPS:
Betts Brown
Faculty
T
he Program in Metropolitan Studies is an undergraduate, interdisciplinary program
for the study of cities, urban issues, and urban culture.
Using New York City as their laboratory, students work to better understand the
relationship between people and the built environment. In their course work, students
develop a critical understanding of how metropolitan areas evolve while they examine those
areas’ core problems.
The program exploits one of NYU’s major assets—its New York City location—in
a variety of ways. In many courses, students learn through assignments involving independent fieldwork, observation, and analysis in both Manhattan and the greater metropolitan
area. All majors participate in an 8-point internship program enabling them to work in government or nonprofit agencies while participating in a seminar in order to link this practical experience with theoretical and historical issues. The internship allows students to get
involved in the community, gain experience in a professional setting, and explore career
options. There is an honors program for qualified students that culminates in a senior thesis written under supervision of a faculty member.
The program draws on faculty active in the city’s government, community, and
nonprofit agencies. The major provides excellent training for students who wish to pursue
further professional or graduate studies as well as for those seeking careers in the public,
nonprofit, or private sectors. It provides particularly valuable preparation for students interested in law, the health professions, teaching, journalism, social work, architecture, city and
regional planning, public policy, public administration, nonprofit administration, and community organization.
An accelerated B.A./M.P.A. arrangement exists with New York University’s
Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service. For more information, see under
Preprofessional, Accelerated, and Specialized Programs.
Professors:
Molotch, Walkowitz
Assistant Professors:
Brenner, Hamm
Adjunct Faculty:
Brettschneider, Carey, Dannin, Haff,
Lasdon, Paskin, Paxson, Silberblatt
Affiliated Faculty:
Bender, Broderick, Casey, Horowitz,
Moss, Rose, Siu, Tchen
METROPOLITAN
STUDIES
•
211
Program
MAJOR
Students majoring in metropolitan
studies take two introductory
sequence courses, four elective area
courses, and four research core courses, including the internship. The
major is structured sequentially.
With the introductory sequence, the
student begins a general, comparative, and historical overview of cities
and how they change, comprehensively addressing cultural, political,
and economic issues. The student
then takes four electives that explore
particular urban topics or issues.
Thereafter the student develops his
or her interests through an internship
in a related area. Finally, two research
seminars enable the student to develop skills in primary research and
written communication, as well as
data and policy analysis.
The introductory sequence consists of Introduction to Metropolitan
Studies, V99.0101 (or Societies and
the Social Sciences: Interdisciplinary
Perspectives on Metropolitan Studies,
V55.0631), and Crisis of the Modern
City: New York City in Comparative
and Historical Perspective,
V99.0103. Additionally, there is a
Courses
INTRODUCTORY CORE
COURSES
Introduction to Metropolitan
Studies (or Societies and the
Social Sciences: Interdisciplinary
Perspectives on Metropolitan
Studies, V55.0631) 4 points.
A broad and interdisciplinary introduction to the field of urban studies.
Surveying the major approaches that
have been deployed to investigate the
urban experience in the contested
social space of the modern city, this
course explores the historical geography of capitalist urbanization with
particular attention to North American and European cities, to colonial
and postcolonial cities, and to the
global contexts of urban development. Major topics include urban
politics and governance; suburban
and regional development contexts;
urban social movements; urban planning and restructuring; the gendering of urban space; and racism, racial
segregation, and the politics of urban
space.
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METROPOLITAN
required research core of four courses:
Internship Fieldwork, V99.0401;
Internship Seminar, V99.0402;
Research Methods in Metropolitan
Studies, V99.0501; and Senior
Research Seminar in Metropolitan
Studies, V99.0502. Students must
complete one introductory sequence
course before taking Research Methods in Metropolitan Studies and two
introductory sequence courses plus
Research Methods before taking
Senior Research Seminar. Finally, students choose four courses in three
elective areas of concentration—
social welfare and public policy,
urban culture and identity, and the
material city.
the metropolitan studies program.
Students intern at agencies dealing
with a range of urban issues and take
a corequisite seminar that enables
them to focus the work experience in
meaningful academic terms. Students
majoring in metropolitan studies are
required to take an internship,
although many nonmajors also
enroll. The goals of the internship
are threefold: (1) to allow students to
apply the theory they have gained
through course work, (2) to provide
students with the analytical tools to
improve urban life, and (3) to assist
students in exploring professional
career paths.
HONORS PROGRAM
MINOR
The minor consists of four courses.
Introduction to Metropolitan Studies
(or Societies and the Social Sciences:
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on
Metropolitan Studies, V55.0631) is
required.
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
The internship complements and
enhances the formal course work of
Crisis of the Modern City:
New York City in Comparative
and Historical Perspective
V99.0103 4 points.
Places the public sense of crisis that
has been associated with modern
cities such as New York in historical
and comparative perspective. Liberal
urban policy in late Victorian London identified the city as both the
center and crisis point for an urbanbased capitalist world economy.
Compares and contrasts the distinct
patterns of urban development and
public policy from that era with
those in the relatively new Sunbelt
and older industrial Snowbelt cities
of Los Angeles and Chicago, respectively, and with those patterns in a
“Third World” city such as Buenos
Aires. The second half of the course
then uses these cities as a context for
understanding New York City’s
urban “crisis” in the 20th century.
STUDIES
Honors work consists of a yearlong,
12-credit individualized research
project to be completed during the
senior year and conducted through a
sequence of independent study courses in consultation with a faculty
member. Honors students present
and defend their completed research
before a committee of metropolitan
studies faculty. For general requirements, please see under Honors and
Awards.
ELECTIVE COURSES
Urban Cultural Life I and II
V99.0216 and V99.0217 0, 2, or
4 points.
Few cities enjoy as rich a cultural life
as New York City, with its galaxy of
neighborhoods, museums, galleries,
theatres, concert halls, and alternative spaces. Through walking tours,
attendance at cultural events, and
visits to local cultural institutions,
students explore the definition of
urban culture. Sites include the
familiar and the unfamiliar; the Village and the outer boroughs; and
behind-the-scenes looks at mainstays
such as the Lincoln Center as well as
alternative venues, neighborhood
sites, and community events. The
goal is for students to examine the
attributes that constitute culture and
community from an interdisciplinary
perspective. Readings and films
expand their understanding of these
concepts. Students taking the course
for credit undertake in-depth research
projects in various neighborhoods.
Law and Urban Problems
V99.0232 4 points.
Interdisciplinary introduction to the
law as it interacts with society.
Analysis focuses on problems in areas
such as housing, zoning, welfare, and
consumer affairs, emphasizing the
underlying social, economic, and
political causes of the problems and
the responses made by lawmakers
and courts. Readings are drawn from
the law and social science. No specific knowledge of law is required.
Urban Schools in Crisis: Policy
Issues and Perspectives
V99.0238 4 points.
Examines the changing political purposes of public education. The pressures placed on school systems and
how they adapt to the demands of
political clients and constituents are
studied in the context of political
and fiscal pressures exerted by competing priorities at different levels of
government. The intergovernmental
context of urban schools is also
explored, with emphasis on repeated
criticisms of the adequacy of the
American public school system to
train future generations to think and
perform well in the workplace.
Work and Wealth in the City: The
Economics of Urban Growth
V99.0243 4 points.
The financing of complex American
cities raises related issues about the
changing character of work in the
city and the organization of wealth
and city finances in contemporary
urban America. Examines a diverse
set of questions about the forms of
capital needed to maintain a city, the
economics of regional development,
the role of taxes in supporting services and urban development, the job
structure of a metropolitan area, and
the types of incentives necessary to
maintain a diverse labor force.
Community Empowerment
V99.0244 4 points.
Empowerment is defined as those
processes, mechanisms, strategies, and
tactics through which people, as well
as organizations and communities,
gain mastery over their lives. It is
personal as well as institutional and
organizational. This course addresses
these issues in a wide variety of community settings. It is designed to be
challenging and rewarding to those
students interested in helping people
work together to improve their lives.
Sexual Identity and Urban
Community
V99.0245 4 points.
Through necessity and desire, people
build communities, and forge
alliances, in order to work, play, live,
and survive. This course asks questions such as how do people build
“communities” in the urban environment based on their articulations of
gender, sexuality, or sexual orientation? Are gender and sexuality defining features of the urban experience?
Or are they only components of a
much larger and more complex set of
urban identities? Students read and
respond to many different historical,
sociological, and theoretical writings
about a wide variety of issues related
to gender, sexuality, and community.
Culture of the City
V99.0247 4 points.
Urban culture is complex, fantastic,
frightening, and a part of daily life,
encompassing everything from
vaudeville, the circus, the public
library, opera, and dance to the local
bar, social club, and graffiti. By considering cities to be sources of cultural invention, it explores, through literature, history, social science, and
student experience, the evolution of
high and popular culture, both modernist and postmodernist. Emphasis
is on how cultures create bonds
between specific interest groups and
on how culture becomes the arena for
acting out or resolving group conflict.
Women in the Urban
Environment
V99.0270 Identical to V97.0290.
4 points.
Explores the effects of urban spatial
and economic changes on women’s
lives. Is the labor force of the new
service-based city predominantly
female, and where do these women
live? How do women of different
ethnic groups, classes, races, and religious affiliations fare in the city?
What are the problems of the new
female immigrants from the West
Indies, Haiti, Mexico, and the Pacific
Rim? Are women as a low-wage
labor pool displacing men in certain
employment categories? What
changes in urban family structure
does the 2000 census reveal, and
what are the implications for
women’s social service needs? Theoretical and historical analysis of sexism. Implications for health care,
welfare, day care, crime, family relations, sexual harassment, and wage
discrimination.
City Planning: Social and
Economic Aspects
V99.0280 4 points.
Introduction to the theories and
practice of city planning and critical
evaluation of the field. Also examines
the role of city planning in influencing urban development and confronting chronic urban social problems. Gives special attention to the
impact of planning on the neighborhood as opposed to the citywide
level, to social science as opposed to
the physical side of urban planning,
and to the political context of planning as opposed to the notion of
planners as “neutral” technical
experts.
Topics in Metropolitan Studies
V99.0290 4 points.
Uses the seminar format to explore a
critical urban topic in depth. Past
offerings have included Space and
Power: Issues in Political Theory and
Suburbia: An Ongoing American
Dream. See the director or manager
of internships for requirements and
content.
Introduction to Black Urban
Studies
V99.0105 Identical to V11.0020.
4 points.
See description under Africana Studies
(11).
Violence in American History
V99.0220 Identical to V57.0616.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Race, Power, and the
Postindustrial City
V99.0301 Identical to V11.0301 and
V14.0324. 4 points.
See description under Africana Studies
(11).
Urban Economics
V99.0310 Identical to V31.0227.
4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
Economics of the Environment
V99.0311 Identical to V31.0230.
4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
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STUDIES
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Shaping the Urban Environment
V99.0320 Identical to V43.0021.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Decision Making and Urban
Design
V99.0321 Identical to V43.0032.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Environmental Design: Issues
and Methods
V99.0322 Identical to V43.0034.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Cities in History
V99.0323 Identical to V43.0033.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
Urban Design and the Law
V99.0327 Identical to V43.0037.
4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
New York City: A Social History
V99.0330 Identical to V57.0639.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
The City in American History
V99.0331 Identical to V57.0636.
4 points.
See description under History (57).
Asian Communities in New York
City
V99.0344 Identical to V15.0020.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Race, Class, and Metropolitan
Transformation
V99.0345 Identical to V15.0601.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Race, Immigration, and Cities
V99.0347 Identical to V15.0322 and
V93.0347. 4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Multiethnic New York
V99.0349 Identical to V15.0310.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Urban Sociology
V99.0350 Identical to V93.0460.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Social Policy in Modern Societies
V99.0351 Formerly Urban Public Policy. Identical to V93.0313. 4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Contested Cities
V99.0334 Identical to V93.0936.
4 points.
See description under Sociology (93).
Filming Asian America
V99.0352 Identical to V15.0090.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Reimagining London Past and
Present: Black and South Asian
Movement in Post Empire
V99.0335 Identical to V15.0800
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
“Chinatown” and the American
Imagination
V99.0353 Identical to V15.0800
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15)
Reimagining Community
V99.0341 Identical to V15.0200 and
V14.0325. 4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
Asian/Pacific American Community Studies
V99.0343 Identical to V15.0101.
4 points.
See description under
Asian/Pacific/American Studies (15).
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Government of New York City
V99.0370 Identical to V53.0364.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Urban Government and Politics
V99.0371 Identical to V53.0360.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Law and Society
V99.0372 Identical to V53.0335 and
V97.0335. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
STUDIES
Community Psychology
V99.0380 Identical to V89.0074.
4 points.
See description under Psychology (89).
The Politics of Poverty and
Welfare
V99.0382 Identical to V53.0382.
4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Topics in Women’s Studies: Lives
in Exile: Gender, Sexuality, and
Diaspora
V99.0996 Identical to V97.0996.
4 points.
See description under Women’s Studies
(97).
RESEARCH CORE COURSES
Internship Fieldwork
V99.0401 Corequisite: V99.0402. Ten
hours of fieldwork are required for 2
points, fifteen for 4 points. Majors must
enroll for 4 points. 2 or 4 points.
Internship Seminar
V99.0402 Corequisite: V99.0401.
Prerequisites: majors must have taken one
course in the introductory sequence and
one elective. There are no prerequisites for
nonmajors except that they be in their
junior or senior year. Interview and permission of the manager of internships
required. 4 points.
Section 1: General Internship. Nonprofit and government agencies.
Section 2: Legal Aid Internship. Students work directly with the criminal justice division of The Legal Aid
Society.
The internship complements the
program’s formal course work. It
enables students to test theory
against practice as they help improve
urban life by working in a government, community, or nonprofit
agency. It also gives students the
chance to explore career paths in
their field of interest. The internship
is open to nonmajors. Internships are
offered in many areas including law,
city planning, arts, housing, education, and social welfare. In addition,
students attend a weekly seminar in
which they analyze the workings and
policies of urban institutions.
Research Methods in Metropolitan Studies
V99.0501 Nonmajors must have permission of the instructor. Prerequisites for
majors: at least one of the introductory
core courses. 4 points.
Introduces an array of social scientific
research methods, both qualitative
and quantitative, for research in
urban studies. Topics range from
ethnography to survey research to
social statistics, among others. The
course culminates in the development of students’ detailed research
proposals and some practical handson application of the research methods. Majors must enroll in spring of
their junior year.
Senior Research Seminar
V99.0502 Prerequisites for majors:
V99.0501 and the introductory core
courses, V99.0101, V99.0103.
4 points.
Advanced research in metropolitan
studies, which culminates in each
student completing an extended
research paper that makes use of various urban methodology skills. Students work individually and collaboratively on part of a class research
project on a major urban and regional
policy issue. Majors must enroll in
fall of their senior year.
HONORS AND
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Honors Thesis
V99.0503-0504 Prerequisites:
Research Methods in Metropolitan Studies, 3.5 cumulative and major average, or
permission of the director. Open only to
senior majors in metropolitan studies.
4 points per term.
Extended primary research project
completed in a tutorial with a faculty
member in the program. Normally
begun in the second semester of the
junior year or in the fall of the senior
year, this two-semester course culminates in an oral examination of the
written project.
Independent Study
V99.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. 2-4 points per term.
METROPOLITAN
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D E PA RT M E N T O F
Middle Eastern Studies (77)
5 0 WA S H I N G T O N S Q U A R E S O U T H , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 1 2 - 1 0 7 3 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 8 8 8 0 .
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTMENT:
Professor Gilsenan
DIRECTOR OF
UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Kennedy
Faculty
T
he Department of Middle Eastern Studies (MES) focuses on the past and present of
a vast and culturally diverse region of the world that extends from North Africa to
Central Asia and from the Mediterranean to the Indian Ocean. It adopts interdisciplinary and comparative approaches to Middle Eastern societies from antiquity to the
present day, with particular focus on the period after the emergence of Islam. A Middle
Eastern studies major offers students the opportunity to master one of the regional languages, including Arabic, Persian, Turkish, Hindi/Urdu, and ancient Egyptian. Students
will also acquire an interdisciplinary understanding of this pivotal area of the world by
studying with the department’s specialists in history, anthropology, political science, literature, law, religious studies, and language.
In addition to the courses listed below, students are encouraged to select cross-listed
courses in other departments and programs such as anthropology, fine arts, Hebrew and
Judaic studies, history, politics, comparative literature, religious studies, and sociology that
complement the department’s offerings.
Professors:
Chelkowski, Gilsenan, Lockman,
McChesney, Peters, Shohat
Assistant Professors:
Abboushi, Haykel, Husain,
Kennedy, Salzmann
Associate Professors:
Fahmy, Mikhail
Clinical Associate Professor:
Ferhadi
Associate Research Scholar:
Goelet
Affiliated Faculty:
Fleming, Ivry, Kazemi, Mitchell
Language Lecturers:
Erol, Ilieva, Khorrami, Sands
Program
Language: To obtain the B.A.
degree with a Middle Eastern studies
major, students must meet the CAS
language requirement in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, or Hindi/Urdu. This
means (1) studying one of these languages at least through the intermediate level (four semesters) at NYU;
(2) demonstrating the completion of
equivalent course work elsewhere; or
(3) satisfying the CAS language
requirement by exam in one of these
languages.
Course Requirements: In addition to the language requirement,
majors must successfully complete at
least eight MES courses. Undergraduates are encouraged to consider taking MES graduate courses as well.
Majors are required to take the
following courses:
1. Two courses from the MES history list, one of which must be
V77.0688, Topics in Middle Eastern
History.
2. One course from the MES literature list.
3. One course from the MES religion list.
216
STUDIES
•
MIDDLE
EASTERN
4. Four elective courses from the
MES course list of the undergraduate’s choosing.
MINOR
Students who wish to minor in Middle Eastern studies must complete
either (1) at least four nonlanguage
courses that are offered by MES or
are cross-listed by MES and approved
by the director of undergraduate
studies or their MES adviser or (2)
four courses in Arabic, Persian, Turkish, or Hindi/Urdu.
AWARDS FOR EXCELLENCE
IN MIDDLE EASTERN
STUDIES
The department offers the following
awards for excellence: the RumiBiruni Prize for excellence in Persian
studies, the Ibn Khaldun Prize for
excellence in Arabic studies, the
Evliya Chelebi Prize for excellence in
Turkish studies, and the Premchand
Prize for excellence in Hindi and
Urdu studies.
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM
The department participates in the
College of Arts and Science internship program. See the director of
Courses
LANGUAGE COURSES
Note: Language examinations are
held before the first week of the fall
and spring semester. For placement
at the appropriate level of language
instruction, students are requested to
consult the department. Qualified
undergraduates are also eligible to
register for advanced language
courses.
ARABIC
Elementary Arabic I, II
V77.0101-0102 Ferhadi, Sands. 4
points per term.
Builds basic skills in modern standard Arabic, the language read and
understood by educated Arabs from
Baghdad to Casablanca. Five hours of
instruction and drill, stressing the
proficiency approach, plus work in
the language laboratory.
Intermediate Arabic I, II
V77.0103, 0104 Prerequisite:
V77.0102 or equivalent. Ferhadi,
Sands. 4 points per term.
Builds on the skills acquired in
V77.0101-0102, with increased
emphasis on writing and reading
from modern sources in addition to
aural/oral proficiency.
The following two Advanced Arabic
courses compose the third year of
Arabic language instruction and are
open to undergraduates who have
successfully completed the Intermediate Arabic sequence.
undergraduate studies for further
information.
HONORS PROGRAM
Eligibility: Any student majoring in
the department who has spent at
least two full years in residence at
the College of Arts and Science and
who has completed at least 60 points
of graded work in the College. The
student must maintain a general
grade point average of 3.5 and a
major average of 3.5.
Requirements:
1. Completion of the major
requirements.
2. Completion of at least two
Advanced (Media) Contemporary
Arabic I, II
G77.1005, 1006 Prerequisite:
V77.0104 or equivalent. Ferhadi. 4
points per term.
Focuses on contemporary standard
Arabic as used by electronic and
print media. Contemporary press
reports from the Middle East are
used as texts, and current news programs from select Arab broadcasts
are used and discussed.
FARSI/PERSIAN
Elementary Persian I, II
V77.0401-0402 Khorrami. 4 points
per term.
Grammar, phonetics, and pronunciation of modern standard Persian,
reading simple texts, and writing
short compositions. Builds basic
skills in modern standard Persian in
preparation for reading classical Persian literature.
Intermediate Persian I, II
V77.0403, 0404 Prerequisite:
V77.0402 or equivalent. Khorrami. 4
points per term.
Builds on the skills acquired in
V77.0401-0402 through continued
study of grammar and syntax. Practice in spoken Persian. Introduction
to classical and modern prose and
poetry.
graduate-level courses with a grade
point average of 3.0. These courses
may be used to complete part of the
major requirement.
3. Have no grade lower than a C
in a Middle Eastern studies course.
4. Write an honors paper of 2535 double-spaced, typed pages under
the supervision of an MES faculty
member, for which up to four points
of Independent Study credit may be
awarded (V77.0997, 0998). The subject of the honors paper and the faculty supervisor will be chosen in consultation with the director of undergraduate studies.
TURKISH
Elementary Turkish I, II
V77.0501-0502 Erol. 4 points per
term.
Introduction to the written and spoken language of modern Turkey. All
texts are in Latin characters and
comprise both textual and audio
material.
Intermediate Turkish I, II
V77.0503, 0504 Prerequisite:
V77.0502 or equivalent. Erol. 4 points
per term.
Materials from Turkish newspapers,
magazines, literature, and radio provide the basis for reading comprehension and conversational ability in
modern Turkish.
HINDI/URDU
Elementary Hindi/Urdu I, II
V77.0405, 0406 Ilieva. 4 points per
term.
The overall goal of this course, as a
part of a two-year curriculum, is to
prepare the student for a high level
of proficiency in Hindi. Through a
variety of class, small group, and
paired activities, as well as language
and computer lab sessions, students
are expected to develop reading,
speaking, listening, and writing
skills. The instructor also takes into
consideration individual needs.
Intermediate Hindi/Urdu I, II
V77.0407, 0408 Ilieva. 4 points per
term.
Designed to further develop fluency
in oral and written communication.
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EASTERN
STUDIES
•
217
In addition to the class, small group
activities, and language and computer lab sessions, students are given an
individual assignment to work with
native speakers from the community
and report on their findings. The
reading assignments are designed to
broaden understanding of content
used for oral presentations.
Advanced Hindi
V77.0409 Ilieva. 4 points.
This course offers an overview of
Indian culture via original texts and
is designed to improve students’
advanced level reading as well as
their written and oral discourse in
Hindi. Emphasis is placed on the
development of linguistic skills
required for a close reading and indepth analysis of complex texts.
Introduction is learner-centered and
students have a choice in the selection of the texts and topics for their
presentations. Taught seminar style,
the course combines classroom discussions, oral reports and occasional
background lectures. Before taking
this course, students should have
completed the two-year sequence of
Hindi or have an equivalent background.
Note: Please consult the class schedule of courses and the Graduate School
of Arts and Science Bulletin for information about advanced courses in
Arabic, Persian, and Turkish that are
open to undergraduates who have
completed the intermediate level of
the languages.
HISTORY COURSES
World Cultures: Ancient Near
East and Egypt
V55.0501 Goelet. 4 points.
See description under Foundations of
Contemporary Culture (55).
World Cultures: The Middle East
in the Modern World
V55.0526 Lockman. 4 points.
See description under Foundations of
Contemporary Culture (55).
World Cultures: Muslim Spain
V55.0527 Peters. 4 points.
See description under Foundations of
Contemporary Culture (55).
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•
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EASTERN
The History of Ancient Egypt,
3200-50 B.C.
V77.0611 Identical to V57.0506.
Goelet. 4 points.
Political and intellectual history of
ancient Egypt, introducing the student to a variety of religious and secular texts and showing how Egyptologists have drawn upon biographical
texts, royal inscriptions, literary
papyri, and archaeological remains to
recreate Egyptian history.
Mediterranean Worlds
V77.0660 Identical to V57.0131.
Salzmann. 4 points.
The early modern Mediterranean was
a fluid frontier shifting between the
Islamic and Christian powers. From
the mosques of Spain to the markets
of Venice to the multireligious
neighborhoods of Istanbul, students
explore sites of coexistence, accommodation, and conflict through history, literature, and art.
The Making of the Muslim
Middle East, 600-1250
V77.0640 Identical to V57.0542 and
V65.0640. Husain. 4 points.
A historical and comparative
approach to the first half millennium
of Islamic history. Course traces the
cultural and religious strands shaping
the institutions, belief systems, and
practices. Using primary sources, students explore the major debates in
the cultural history of this period.
Seminar: Colonialism,
Imperialism, and Nationalism in
the Middle East
V77.0677 Identical to V57.0541.
Fahmy, Lockman. 4 points.
Addresses theories of nationalism and
its emergence as the primary political
ideology in the Middle East. Investigates historiographical problems in
writing nationalist history and the
intersection of class and gender concerns with national identities.
Cultural Pluralism in the
Ottoman Empire
V77.0649 Salzmann. 4 points.
During the first half of the semester,
we discuss the differences in the ideology and practice between the Muslim Middle East and the Christian
West with regard to the rights of
minority subjects. Tracing the early
history of the Ottoman Empire, students explore the limits of tolerance
within the sultan’s realms and the
nature of “multiculturalism” in specific settings, such as Cyprus, Bosnia,
and Aleppo (Syria). The second half
of the course addresses the impact of
modern economic and political conditions on relations between the different communities of the empire.
Seminar: Topics in Middle
Eastern History
V77.0688 Identical to V57.0550.
Staff. 4 points.
Focuses on a particular aspect of
Islamic, Ottoman, or modern Middle
Eastern history, with an emphasis on
historiographical and comparative
issues. Intended primarily for
advanced undergraduates in Middle
Eastern studies and in history, but
other students may register with permission of the instructor.
The Ottoman Empire in World
History
V77.0650 Identical to V57.0515 and
V65.0651. Salzmann. 4 points.
Examines the Ottoman Empire from
a world historical perspective. Beginning with the collapse of the Byzantine state and ending with the
French Revolution, students gain an
understanding of the Ottoman state
and society and its responses to, and
participation in, global trade, interstate warfare, and the cultural and
political development of the modern
world.
STUDIES
Europe and the Middle East
V77.0689 Identical to V57.0534.
Staff. 4 points.
Survey of economic, political, and
cultural relations between Europe
and the Middle East. Stresses the
dynamics of social, economic, and
political change in the Middle East
in the 19th and 20th centuries
resulting from the dramatic expansion of European influence in the
region. Also explores Middle Eastern
ideological, cultural, and political
responses to European dominance.
The Emergence of the Modern
Middle East
V77.0690 Identical to V57.0531.
Lockman. 4 points.
Surveys main political, social, economic, and intellectual currents of
the 20th century. Emphasis on historical background and development
of current problems in the region.
Topics include imperialism, nationalism, religion, orientalism, women,
class formation, oil, the Arab-Israeli
crisis, and the Iranian revolution.
Islam and the West
V77.0694 Identical to V57.0520,
V65.0694. Staff. 4 points.
Examines the evolution of diplomatic, trade, and cultural contacts
between Islam and the West. Particular attention is paid to the complex
relationship that developed between
these two civilizations and their historical impact on each other.
Zionism and the State of Israel
V77.0696 Identical to V78.0180.
Engel. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Palestine, Zionism, Israel
V77.0697 Identical to V57.0532.
Lockman. 4 points.
Survey of the conflict over Palestine
from its origins in the late 19th century until the present. The purpose
of this course is to examine the evolution of this ongoing struggle in its
historical context and then try to
understand why the various parties
to the conflict thought and acted as
they have.
Israel: Fact Through Fiction
V77.0698 Identical to V78.0780.
Landress. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
Seminar: Modern Central Asia
V77.0700 Identical to V57.0700.
McChesney. 4 points.
Surveys the emergence of the newly
independent states of Central Asia,
the historical legacy that connects
them, and the political, social, environmental, and economic problems
that they confront today.
pre-Islamic times to the present.
Selected texts in translation from the
major genres, both in prose and
poetry, are studied as works of art in
themselves and as a reflection of the
societies that produced them.
Literature and Society in the
Arab World
V77.0711 Mikhail. 4 points.
Examines selected works in translation of leading 20th-century poets,
novelists, and short story writers that
reflect changing conditions and
mores within Middle Eastern and
North African societies. Investigates
such topics as conflicts between traditionalists and modernists, the
impact of urbanization on rural societies, and the existential dilemmas of
men and women.
Women and War: Contemporary
Arabic Literature and Film
V77.0714 Identical to V29.0714,
V97.0714, and H72.0714. Abboushi.
4 points.
Women are central figures in the
political upheavals of the modern
Middle East; their images have had a
remarkable hold on national and
international imaginations. The
course investigates the representations of women and war in Arabic
literature and film through such topics as the gendering of war; the gender politics of national symbolism
and liberation; the politics and aesthetics of documentary film; revolutionary erotic and antierotic; and
combat and collaboration.
Comparative Imperialism
V77.0715 Identical to V29.0811.
Abboushi. 4 points.
Examines the diverse ways in which
imperial and aesthetic idioms converge in American, English, French,
and Arabic literature. Texts include
19th- and 20th-century narrative,
political discourse, and poetry.
LITERATURE COURSES
Except where indicated, there is no
language requirement for these
courses.
Masterpieces of Islamic Literature
in Translation
V77.0710 Identical to V65.0710.
Kennedy, Mikhail. 4 points.
Survey of the masterpieces of Arabic,
Persian, and Turkish literature from
The Arabian Nights
V77.0716 Identical to V65.0714.
Kennedy. 4 points.
The Arabian Nights have been an
essential and dynamic literary meeting point between Arabic/Islamic literature and the Western canon. This
course examines both sides of this
cultural dichotomy. Literary analysis
of the tales includes close reading of
the structure of the original as well
MIDDLE
as modern variations by authors such
as Poe and Rushdie.
Modern South Asian Literature
V77.0717 Identical to V29.0717.
Ilieva. 4 points.
Addresses the rich literary product of
modern and contemporary South
Asia. Offers more advanced undergraduates a window on a rich and
culturally varied area of the world, as
well as an understanding of aspects
of South Asian history and society as
represented in translations of modern
prose writing (short stories and novels) originally written in South Asian
languages.
Introduction to Ancient Indian
Literature
V77.0718 Ilieva. 4 points.
An introductory course designed to
acquaint students with the great
works of the ancient Indian literary
tradition, a major part of which was
written in Sanskrit. The earliest form
of that language, called Vedic Sanskrit, is the language of the Vedic
hymns, especially those of the Rig
Veda. Sanskrit has had an unbroken
literary tradition for over 3,000
years. This rich and vast literary, religious, and philosophical heritage is
introduced in this course. In addition, students work with excerpts
from the Jain and Buddhist canons
written in Prakrits and examples of
Tamil poetry. Selections from the
Vedic literature, classical drama,
epics, story literature, and lyric poetry are studied in English translation.
Seminar: Introduction to Islamic
Texts
V77.0720 Kennedy. 4 points.
Introduces students with at least two
semesters of Arabic behind them to
the main stylistic features of classical
Arabic. The object is to give students a flavor of an older, yet essential, register of Arabic through the
most important texts of the Islamic
tradition. These texts constitute the
very core of Islam to this day: the
Koran (Qur’an) and the Hadith (Sayings of the Prophet Muhammad).
The syllabus also includes samples
from the Tafsir tradition (Koranic
hermeneutics), Sufi/mystical literature (poetry and prose), philosophical
novels, and pious tales from the
popular sphere (the Arabian Nights
tradition). The Koran provides a
EASTERN
STUDIES
•
219
sustained focus for the course, with
particular attention being paid to
how it has influenced all categories of
Arabo-Islamic literature: linguistically, stylistically, thematically, and
doctrinally.
SOCIAL SCIENCE COURSES
A Cultural History of Ancient
Egypt
V77.0614 Identical to V57.0505 and
V78.0121. Goelet. 4 points.
Survey of the literary, religious, and
material culture of ancient Egypt.
Each class examines the ancient
Egyptian intellectual world as shown
by a major monument (e.g., the
Great Pyramid) along with its cultural background. Daily life as well
as the visual and symbolic aspects of
the civilization are illustrated with
slides and charts. The reading
emphasizes historical, literary, and
religious texts in translation.
Islam and Politics
V77.0674 Haykel. 4 points.
This course explains the rise of
Islamic political movements in the
contemporary Middle East and looks
at the various ways in which they
have been discussed in the media and
in academic writings. Examples of
Islamist writings and publications
are also presented in order to elucidate the ways in which Islamists
depict themselves and their concerns.
Because of the nature of these movements, the course has a multidisciplinary approach, drawing on concepts
from politics, history, and law.
Seminar: Islamic Law and Society
V77.0780 Haykel. 4 points.
This course introduces students to
Islamic law through a reading of its
various genres and a study of a selection of secondary sources covering a
number of substantive topics (e.g.,
ritual, criminal, and public law). The
course also focuses on the ways
Islamic law has interacted with
Islamic societies in historical practice
and the way it has adapted, or
not adapted, to the challenges of
modernity.
practice. Students are exposed to
medieval and modern legal texts
regarding the status of women as
believers, daughters, wives, mothers,
and legal persons. Case studies from
different periods of Islamic history
are read and discussed as well as
writings from contemporary anthropology.
Politics of the Near and Middle
East
V77.0750 Identical to V53.0540.
Staff. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
International Politics of the
Middle East
V77.0752 Identical to V53.0760.
Mitchell. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Politics and Society in Iran
V77.0797 Identical to V53.0545.
Kazemi. 4 points.
See description under Politics (53).
Area Economics—Middle East
V77.0802 Identical to V31.0224.
Staff. 4 points.
See description under Economics (31).
RELIGION COURSES
World Cultures: Islamic Societies
V55.0502 Peters. 4 points.
See description under Foundations of
Contemporary Culture (55).
Jews in the Islamic World in the
Modern Period
V77.0616 Identical to V78.0114.
Franklin. 4 points.
See description under Hebrew and
Judaic Studies (78).
What Is Islam?
V77.0691 Identical to V57.0085 and
V90.0085. Staff. 4 points.
An introductory course dealing with:
the life of the prophet Muhammad
and the origins of Islam; the beliefs
and practices of the Islamic community; differences between Sunni and
Shiite Islam; Sufism; the spiritual,
intellectual, and artistic life of the
Islamic commonwealth; and modern
Islamic revival.
Seminar: Women and Islamic
Law
V77.0783 Identical to V65.0783.
Haykel. 4 points.
The aim of this course is to acquaint
students with the ways Islamic law
has treated women in theory and
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MIDDLE
EASTERN
STUDIES
World Cultures: Islam in Asia
V55.0523 McChesney. 4 points.
See description under Foundations of
Contemporary Culture (55).
Introduction to Egyptian Religion
V77.0719 Identical to V90.0719.
Goelet. 4 points.
Examines the religious beliefs of the
ancient Egyptians, including the
nature of the gods, syncretism, private religion, theories of divine kingship, the judgment of the dead, cultic practices, the life of priests, the
relationship between this world and
the afterlife, wisdom literature as
moral thought, festivals, funerary
practices, creation myths, and foreign
gods and influences—all illustrated
by Egyptian religious texts or scenes
from temples and tombs.
The Civilizations and Religions of
the Ancient Near East
V77.0790 Identical to V90.0790.
Staff. 4 points.
Introduction to the ancient Near
East. Places the civilizations of
Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Anatolia in
their historical framework and discusses their institutions.
Iran Past and Present
V77.0796 Chelkowski. 4 points.
Ancient Iranian culture and its influence on the Near East. The impact of
the Arab-Islamic conquest, the
Islamization of Iran, and the Iranian
role in the development of Islamic
civilization. The rebirth of Iranian
self-consciousness and the establishment of Shiism as the state religion
under the Safavids. Traditional Iranian culture in conflict with the West.
Modern Iran from the reinstitution
of the monarchy to the Islamic revolution. Illustrated with readings,
slides, films, a museum visit, live
recitations, and music.
Judaism, Christianity, Islam
V77.0800 Identical to V65.0025,
V78.0160, and V90.0102. Peters.
4 points.
Comparative study of the three great
monotheistic religious traditions:
how each understood its origin and
evolution and their similarities and
differences in matters of scripture,
worship, authority, community, theology, and mysticism.
The Sufis: Mystics of Islam
V77.0863 Identical to V65.0863 and
V90.0863. Chelkowski. 4 points.
Readings in the Sufi poets in translation and reflections of their influence
in Persian literature and the European tradition. Sufism as one of the
primary manifestations of the Islamic
spirit in Iran. The effect of Sufism
(the hidden path that leads from the
individual to God) on the shape of
Islam, on the spirit of Persian literature and art, and on Western religious sensibilities.
Art in the Islamic World
V77.0891 Identical to V43.0098 and
V65.0098. Staff. 4 points.
See description under Fine Arts (43).
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Internship
V77.0980, 0981 Prerequisite: permission and placement for departmental
majors from the director of undergraduate
studies. 2 or 4 points.
For guidelines, see under “Internship
Program.”
MIDDLE
Independent Study
V77.0997, 0998 Prerequisite: permission of instructor. 1 to 4 points per term.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
The Middle Eastern studies courses
offered in the Graduate School of
Arts and Science are open to qualified undergraduates. Permission of
the instructor and the director of
undergraduate studies is required.
For further information, please consult the Graduate School of Arts and
Science Bulletin.
EASTERN
STUDIES
•
221
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Music (71)
WAVERLY BUILDING, 24 WAVERLY PLACE, ROOM 268, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6789. (212) 998-8300.
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Averill
DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor
Hoffman
Faculty
T
he Department of Music offers a wide range of opportunities for studying and performing music. Areas of specialization in Western music history and theory include
medieval, Renaissance, baroque, classical, and 19th- and 20th-century music, as
well as music from other parts of the world. Courses are available for students with no previous musical experience as well as for those with some background in areas of music such
as history, theory, composition and orchestration, ethnomusicology, or the history of musical instruments. Through the Collegium Musicum (part of the Center for Early Music), the
Ethnomusicological Ensembles, and the New York University Symphony Orchestra, students bring to life music from many periods and cultures.
The Center for Early Music is devoted to research into problems of performance practice for music before circa 1630. The majority of courses offered by the center are at the graduate level; undergraduate students, however, are welcome (after audition) to work with the
Collegium Musicum, the performing ensemble of the center, using the Noah Greenberg Collection of Musical Instruments (based on the performing collection of the former New York
Pro Musica). The Elmer Holmes Bobst Library and Study Center houses the archives of the
American Institute for Verdi Studies, a continually expanding collection of microfilm
resources, plus numerous books and manuscripts. Students also have access to a major research
collection in the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center.
Professors Emeriti:
Fennelly, LaRue
Carroll and Milton Petrie
Professor of Music:
Bailey
Program
MAJOR
A total of 40 points, including Harmony and Counterpoint I-IV
(V71.0201-0204) and two courses
from History of European Music
(V71.0101-0103), is required. These
courses assume an ability to read
music and a knowledge of basic
music theory. In view of the two-year
theory requirement, students consid-
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MUSIC
Professors:
Averill, Boorman, Burrows, Chusid,
Karchin, Roesner, Yellin
Adjunct Faculty:
Mueller, Panofsky
Assistant Professors:
Dujunco, Hoffman
ering the major in music should see
the director of undergraduate studies
as early as possible. Four other courses are required to complete the
major: one in the area of ethnomusicology, either V71.0014 or
V71.0152; and three selected from
V71.0015, V71.0017, or any other
courses numbered above V71.0100
(except V71.0505-0508) with the
approval of the director of under-
graduate studies. All departmental
courses must be passed with a grade
of “C” or better to count toward the
major.
Musicianship: Music majors are
expected to improve their musicianship in music courses and, even
more, privately. Progress is tested
during the final examinations for
V71.0204 or at the conclusion of the
junior year, whichever comes first.
Courses
At this time, students are tested in
sightsinging and keyboard facility.
Students are strongly advised to
improve their musical skills by
enrolling in one of the performing
ensembles sponsored by the department, for which a maximum of 4
points of credit may be counted
toward the degree.
Faculty advisers: Students
should see the director of undergraduate studies, who approves programs
of study each term.
Music making: Music making is
strongly encouraged. All majors in
music must pass a keyboard proficiency examination administered by
the director of undergraduate studies. Majors should also participate
each term in a departmental ensemble group such as an NYU orchestra
or the department’s Collegium
Musicum or Ethnomusicological
Ensembles. Course credit for such
participation is available. Students
are also urged to attend concerts of
the Washington Square Contemporary Music Society. A listing and
description of music organizations at
New York University is available
from the department or the Center
for Music Performance.
Prizes: Three prizes are awarded
every year to students in the department: The Elaine R. Brody Prize is
awarded to an outstanding music
major in the junior class; the Hanna
van Vollenhollen Memorial Prize is
awarded to an accomplished music
major in the senior class; and the
Gustave Reese Memorial Prize in
Music is awarded to a student proficient in music who performs a recital
for the students and faculty of the
community.
INTRODUCTORY COURSES
(OPEN TO ALL STUDENTS)
ics may include music in ritual,
music in the theatre, music for dancing, music in the concert hall, background music, and music expressive
of group identity. Course opens with
a brief introduction to the elements
of music.
The Art of Listening
V71.0003 Additional conference section
required. 4 points.
The art of listening to music of great
composers. Students acquire a basic
vocabulary of musical terms, concepts, and listening skills in order to
describe their responses to musical
experiences. The course considers the
structure and style of masterworks
by such composers as Dufay, Josquin,
Lassus, Monteverdi, Bach, Handel,
Mozart, Haydn, Beethoven, Wagner,
Brahms, Verdi, Debussy, Stravinsky,
Schoenberg, Berg, and others. Illustrated by recordings. Students are
expected to listen to a wide range of
music, which is available at the
Avery Fisher Center for Music and
Media at the Elmer Holmes Bobst
Library and Study Center.
Music in Society
V71.0004 4 points.
How music contributes to our lives,
the variety of roles it plays, and the
ways it plays them. These roles are
illustrated in a worldwide repertory
of compositions. Representative top-
HONORS PROGRAM
Seniors wishing to graduate with
honors must enroll for a 4-point
Independent Study in the first
semester of their senior year. They
will work on an individual project in
music history, analysis, or composition. This might take the form of an
analytical study of a major work or
group of works, the writing of a
History of Opera
V71.0006 Chusid, Mueller, Yellin.
4 points.
Opera both as musical theatre and as
theatrical music. Topics include the
evolution of musical structure, history of the libretto, and lighting and
staging techniques.
Introduction to Music in World
Cultures
V71.0014 Additional conference section
required. Averill, Dujunco. 4 points.
Introduction to the folk and traditional music of Europe, sub-Saharan
Africa, Asia, and the Americas, with
particular attention to historical
relationships.
The Music of Bach
V71.0015 Yellin. 4 points.
Study of important instrumental and
vocal works of the great German
master of the first half of the 18th
century. While emphasizing the ori-
musical composition of substantial
dimensions, or a biographical study
of a composer—all under the guidance of a faculty member. Prerequisites include an average of 3.5 in
music courses and an average of 3.5
overall. For general requirements, see
Honors and Awards. On the recommendation of the department, the
student is entitled to an honors citation at graduation. A student wishing to enroll should apply to the
director of undergraduate studies.
MINOR
Four courses in the department are
required. One must be chosen from
among V71.0020 or V71.0201-0204
in consultation with the director of
undergraduate studies. Three further
courses should be chosen from
among V71.0003, V71.0004,
V71.0006, V71.0014, V71.0015,
V71.0016, V71.0018, and
V71.0100 or above (except
V71.0505-0508). No grade lower
than a “C” counts toward the minor.
gins and style of the music, the
course also relates Bach’s works to
the society for which they were written; it also examines how they have
become universal models of excellence for generations of succeeding
composers as well as sources of intellectual entertainment.
African American Music in the
United States
V71.0016 Identical to V11.0016.
4 points.
Study of black people’s contribution
to the music of the United States
from the time of the first arrival of
Africans in 1619 to the present, covering such topics as the African heritage, folk song, and performers and
illustrated by recordings, films, and
live performances. Assignments are
based on the examination of primary
sources and listening to recordings.
Jazz
V71.0018 4 points.
The history and development of
black music in America, with special
emphasis on the music from 1870
to the present. Course is illustrated
with recordings, films, and live
performances.
MUSIC
•
223
The Elements of Music
V71.0020 Formerly V71.0200. Additional conference section required.
4 points.
The basic theory of music: concepts
of key, scale, tonality, and rhythm.
Course explores the underlying principles and inner workings of the
tonal system, a system that has guided all of Western music from the
years 1600 to 1900. It includes a discussion of historical background and
evolution. Related skills in sightsinging, dictation, and keyboard harmony are stressed in the conference
sections.
ADVANCED COURSES
(REQUIRE APPROVAL OF
THE DIRECTOR OF UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES)
HISTORY OF EUROPEAN MUSIC
The following three courses form a
chronological survey of the music of
Atlantic civilization from the Middle
Ages to the present. They emphasize
the development of musical style, the
relationship of music to other
intellectual activities, and music’s
functions in society. Students are
encouraged to attend concerts of the
musical repertory discussed in class
and to perform it themselves.
Assigned works are available in the
Avery Fisher Center for Music and
Media in the Elmer Holmes Bobst
Library and Study Center. Any term
of this sequence may be taken alone
for credit.
Medieval and Renaissance Music
V71.0101 Additional conference section
required. Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Boorman, Roesner. 4 points.
Topics include the music of the
medieval church: the codification
and extension of the plainsong repertory and the emergence and development of polyphony; music of the
medieval court (troubadours, trouvères, and minnesingers); the ascendancy of secular polyphony in the
14th century and the subsequent
Renaissance balance between sacred
and secular: mass and motet, and
chanson and madrigal; the beginnings of an autonomous repertory for
instruments in the 16th century.
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•
MUSIC
The Baroque and Classical
Periods
V71.0102 Additional conference section
required. Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Burrows, Chusid. 4 points.
Topics include the works of Monteverdi, Vivaldi, J. S. Bach, Handel,
Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven; the
ascendancy of the secular over the
sacred resumed and maintained; a
new harmonic basis for musical
structure: the basso continuo; the
theatricalization of music in opera,
oratorio, and the cantata; the expansion of the span of time music can
sustain and, in the instrumental
forms of sonata and concerto, a new
musical independence from nonmusical ideas; the concert as music’s
own occasion; musical autonomy in
the symphonies and quartets of the
Viennese classicists.
Romanticism and the
20th Century
V71.0103 Additional conference section
required. Prerequisite: the ability to read
music. Mueller. 4 points.
The works of major composers from
Beethoven to the present day. Topics
include the effect of romanticism on
musical forms: symphony, sonata,
lieder, opera; the central importance
of Wagner’s musical ideal; major revolutions of the early 20th century:
Debussy, Schoenberg, Stravinsky,
Bartók; and later serialism: Webern,
Boulez, Babbitt, Stockhausen. Discussion of Cage, minimalism, and
other recent developments.
TOPICS IN THE HISTORY OF
MUSIC AND IN
ETHNOMUSICOLOGY
Students intending to register for
any of the following must be able to
read music and are required to consult with the director of undergraduate studies or the instructor.
Mozart’s Operas
V71.0133 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Chusid. 4 points.
The topic changes each time the
course is offered.
Beethoven
V71.0142 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Bailey, Burrows, Chusid.
4 points.
Studies in selected works from the
music of Beethoven: piano sonatas,
chamber music, symphonies, concertos, and the opera Fidelio. These illu-
minate Beethoven’s place in the
Viennese classical tradition.
19th-Century Orchestral Music
After Beethoven
V71.0134 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Bailey, Chusid, Mueller, Yellin.
4 points.
The impact of Beethoven’s innovations on composers of the ensuing
generations, with particular emphasis
on works by some of the following
composers: Weber, Schubert,
Mendelssohn, Schumann, Berlioz,
Liszt, Dvor̆ák, Wagner, Bruckner,
Brahms, Tchaikovsky, Franck,
Strauss, Mahler, Elgar, and Debussy.
Piano Music and Song in the
19th Century
V71.0144 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Bailey, Mueller. 4 points.
The development of the piano repertory from Beethoven through
Richard Strauss and Rachmaninoff;
the various song repertories—lied,
gesang, French mélodie, and postWagnerian art song—and their literary sources.
Wagner
V71.0136 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Bailey, Roesner. 4 points.
A chronological survey of Wagner’s
major works, with emphasis on
either The Flying Dutchman or
Tannhäuser, plus Tristan, Meistersinger,
and The Ring.
American Music
V71.0137 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. Yellin. 4 points.
Survey of the primary role played by
musical activity in the shaping of
American culture from Jamestown to
the present. The course stresses communal, educational, and artistic
aspects of American music that have
resulted in the richness and diversity
of our present musical life. Composers may include Billings, Mason,
Gottschalk, Paine, MacDowell,
Chadwick, Ives, Thomson, Copland,
Blitzstein, Bernstein, Carter, Cage,
and Glass.
Ragtime, Jazz, and Swing
V71.0138 Prerequisite: ability to read
music. 4 points.
Survey of America’s most distinctive
popular music from its African and
European roots to its birth in New
Orleans and its spread throughout
the United States. Emphasizes composers and performers such as Scott
Joplin, Jellyroll Morton, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Skitch Henderson, Benny Goodman, Count
Basie, and Mitch Miller.
Words and Music: The Song as
Mixed Medium
V71.0140 Prerequisite: one introductory course in the department. Burrows.
4 points.
Song is the marriage of two unique
arts, poetry and music. As such, it
requires of the composer, the performer, and the listener a sensitivity
both to verbal and to melodic structures. This team-taught course
explores the artistic possibilities of
voice as an instrument of linguistic
and musical expression, ranging in
analysis from such word-dominant
forms as chant and recitative to such
music-dominant forms as vocalise
and scat-song. Emphasis is on the
larger structures of sung poetry: Elizabethan and baroque song, lieder,
folk ballad, and opera.
Exploring the World’s Musical
Traditions
V71.0151 Prerequisite: one course chosen from among V71.0003, V71.0020,
and V71.0014 or any more advanced
course in music theory, history, or performance. 4 points.
Introduction to the musics and cultures native to the peoples inhabiting
Europe. Examination of traditional
and popular musical styles found in
these regions from an ethnomusicological perspective. The nature of
post-socialist musical culture and the
impact of glasnost, perestroika, and
ethnic nationalism on musical developments. Considers the musical traditions of Greece and Turkey insofar
as they are related to or have influenced Eastern European musical
styles.
Art Musics of the Non-Western
World
V71.0152 Prerequisite: one course chosen from among V71.0003, V71.0014,
and V71.0200 or any more advanced
course in music theory, history, or performance. Averill, Dujunco. 4 points.
Explores the art music traditions of
Asia and the Mediterranean, including Andalusia; the Arab Middle
East; Central Asia (Afghanistan,
Azerbaijan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan); China; Greece; the Indian
subcontinent; Indonesia; Japan;
Korea; Iran; Thailand; and Turkey.
The course seeks to understand how
these musical traditions relate to the
larger local philosophies of spirituality, morality, and aesthetics and
thence to important aspects of cultural ideology or world view, especially cosmology, social structure,
social behavior, and the conceptualization of time.
more advanced contrapuntal practices of the 18th and 19th centuries.
The course also includes an introduction to 20th-century techniques of
composition.
THEORY
Orchestra III-IV
V71.0507-0508 Prerequisite:
V71.0505-0506. 2 points per term.
May be repeated.
Continuation of V71.0505-0506.
Harmony and Counterpoint I-II
V71.0201-0202 Prerequisite: ability
to read music and background in basic
concepts of music theory. Additional conference section required. Hoffman,
Karchin. 4 points per term.
General principles underlying musical structures, with analysis of examples from relevant musical literature.
Students learn concepts of strict
18th- and 19th-century harmonic
and contrapuntal practices by harmonizing figured basses and constructing short works in various tonal
idioms. The additional weekly classes
are devoted to skills in musicianship
and are required throughout the
sequence.
Harmony and Counterpoint III-IV
V71.0203-0204 Prerequisite:
V71.0201-0202 or permission of the
instructor. Additional conference section
required. Hoffman, Karchin. 4 points per
term.
The continuation of V71.0201-0202
covers chromatic extensions of tonality, intensive analysis of representative
works from the tonal literature, and
PERFORMING ENSEMBLES
Students may audition for the Collegium Musicum, G71.1001-1002,
or the Ethnomusicological Ensembles, G71.1003-1004, and enroll for
2 points of credit per semester. May
be repeated with permission of the
director of undergraduate studies.
Orchestra I-II
V71.0505-0506 2 points per term.
May be repeated.
Open to all performers on orchestral
instruments, after audition. The presentation of two public concerts: sectional rehearsals under professional
guidance.
INDEPENDENT STUDIES
Independent Study
V71.0997, 0998 Open only to music
majors in the senior year. Prerequisite:
written approval of the director of undergraduate studies. 2 or 4 points per term.
Seniors majoring in music who, in
the opinion of the department, possess unusual ability are permitted to
carry on individual work in a selected field of music under the supervision of a member of the department
designated by the director of undergraduate studies.
GRADUATE COURSES OPEN
TO UNDERGRADUATES
Qualified undergraduates may register for graduate courses, including
the Collegium Musicum and the
Ethnomusicological Ensembles, with
the permission of the instructor and
the director of undergraduate studies.
MUSIC
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CENTER FOR
Neural Science (80)
4 WA S H I N G T O N P L A C E , N E W Y O R K , N Y 1 0 0 0 3 - 6 6 2 1 . ( 2 1 2 ) 9 9 8 - 7 7 8 0 .
W W W. C N S . N Y U . E D U / U N D E R G R A D
DIRECTOR OF THE CENTER:
Professor Sanes
DIRECTOR OF
UNDERGRADUATE STUDIES:
Assistant Professor Rubin
Faculty
N
eural science is a collection of disciplines unified by a concern for the function of
the brain. Experimental approaches in neural science vary from analyses of
molecular and cellular mechanisms in nerve cells and groups of nerve cells to
behavioral and psychological studies of whole organisms. Theoretical tools include mathematical and computational modeling approaches that have proved useful in other areas of
science. Experimental questions include issues related to biophysical and neurochemical
mechanisms within single nerve cells, functional neural circuits consisting of small numbers of neurons, the behavior of large systems of neurons, and the relationship between the
activity of elements of the nervous system and the behavior of organisms. The Center for
Neural Science offers a B.S. degree in neural science.
The requirements for the major include V80.0100, V80.0201 (with lab), V80.0202
(with lab), V80.0301, V80.0303, V85.0011, V89.0001, V89.0009 or V89.0010, V23.0011,
V23.0012, V23.0021, V25.0101-0103, V25.0102-0104, V25.0243-0245, and V63.0021.
One elective course in neural science and one in either psychology or biology are also
required. Students should see the director of undergraduate studies for approval of elective
choices. Prehealth students must take, in addition, V85.0012 and V25.0244-0246, but are
not required to take V80.0301. A grade of B or better in Introduction to Neural Science is
required for entrance into the major; a grade of C or better must be achieved in all other
courses required for the major. The following courses are recommended: V25.0244-0246
and V85.0012.
Honors: To graduate with honors in neural science, students must achieve a grade
point average of 3.5 or better for courses required for the major and 3.5 for all other courses
taken for credit. Students must complete at least one semester of tutorial research with a faculty member affiliated with the Center for Neural Science. They are also required to submit an honors thesis that is accepted for honors standing by the faculty sponsor and the
director of undergraduate studies.
Professors:
Feldman, LeDoux, Lennie, Movshon,
Rinzel, Sanes, Shapley
Associate Professors:
Aoki, Glimcher, Kiorpes, Semple,
Simoncelli
Assistant Professors:
Huerta, Reyes, Rubin, Suzuki
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SCIENCE
Research Professors:
Hawken, Krauskopf
Courses
Introduction to Neural Science
V80.0100 Identical to V23.0100.
Prerequisites: V23.0011, 0012. Recommended: V89.0001, V23.0021. Feldman. 4 points.
Introductory lecture course covering
the fundamental principles of neuroscience. Topics include principles of
brain organization, structure and
ultrastructure of neurons, neurophysiology and biophysics of
excitable cells, synaptic transmission, neurotransmitter systems and
neurochemistry, neuropharmacology,
neuroendocrine relations, molecular
biology of neurons, development
and plasticity of the brain, aging
and diseases of the nervous system,
organization of sensory and motor
systems, structure and function of
cerebral cortex, and modeling of
neural systems.
Cellular and Molecular
Neuroscience
V80.0201 Identical to V23.0201.
Prerequisites: V23.0021, V25.0243,
and V80.0100. Lab required for neural
science majors. Aoki, Reyes. 4 or
5 points.
Lecture and laboratory course that
provides students with broad
exposure to current questions and
experimental approaches in cellular
neuroscience. Lectures and laboratories are organized into three areas:
cell structure and organization of the
vertebrate central nervous system,
mechanisms underlying neural signaling and plasticity, and control of
cell form and its developmental
determinants. Laboratory instruction
in anatomical, physiological, and
biochemical methods for investigating the biology of nerve cells.
Note: Neural science majors must
register for both the lecture and the laboratory (5 points); nonmajors may register
for the lecture alone (4 points). A grade
of B or better in V80.0100 is required
for entrance to the laboratory section.
Behavioral and Integrative
Neuroscience
V80.0202 Identical to V23.0202.
Prerequisites: V89.0001, V23.0011,
V23.0012, and V80.0100 (non-neural
science majors may substitute V89.0024
for V80.0100 as a prerequisite for this
course). Lab required for neural science
majors. Glimcher, Suzuki. 4 or 5 points.
Lecture and laboratory course that
focuses on how the brain uses both
sensory and stored information to
generate behavior. Lectures and laboratories cover four main areas: sensory process, learning and memory,
motivational and attentional mechanisms, and the motor system. Laboratories employ a range of electrophysiological techniques, lesions and
pharmacological manipulations, and
various behavioral techniques to
examine the integrative processes by
which the brain governs behavior.
Note: Neural science majors must
register for both the lecture and the laboratory (5 points); nonmajors may register
for the lecture alone (4 points). A grade
of B or better in V80.0100 is required
for entrance to the laboratory section.
Developmental Neurobiology
V80.0303 Identical to V23.0303.
Prerequisites: V80.0100, V23.0021.
Sanes. 4 points.
Advanced course addressing the
major mechanisms and principles
that govern neural development.
Topics include neural induction,
birth and migration of neurons and
glia, patterns of gene expression and
their control, the growth cone and
axonal pathfinding, normal cell
death and survival factors, differentiation of neuron form and molecular
phenotype, initiation of synaptic
function, formation of sensory and
motor maps, regeneration and plasticity in the adult nervous system,
and developmental disorders of the
nervous system in humans.
Tutorial Research
V80.0301 Prerequisites: V80.0201,
V80.0202, or permission of the director
of undergraduate studies. Aoki, Kiorpes.
4 points.
Provides supervised research activities in laboratories connected with
the Center for Neural Science.
Undergraduates are matched with a
graduate student or faculty member
working in an area of interest to the
student. Students gain experience in
many aspects of research and attend
regular meetings to discuss recent
advances in neuroscience and
research-related issues. May be
repeated for credit.
Special Topics in Neural Science
V80.0302 Prerequisites: V80.0201,
V80.0202, or permission of the instructor. Staff. 4 points.
Seminar providing in-depth treatment of an area of current interest in
neuroscience. Lectures present background material and address current
problems in the area related to the
topic. Students read and discuss
review articles and current literature
on the topic. Course content determined on a semester-by-semester
basis.
Independent Study
V80.0997, 0998 Core faculty.
2-4 points per term.
Independent study with a Center for
Neural Science faculty member.
Open to advanced neural science
majors with permission of the director of undergraduate studies.
NEURAL
SCIENCE
•
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D E PA RT M E N T O F
Philosophy (83)
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CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Boghossian
DIRECTOR OF
U N D E R G R A D U AT E
STUDIES:
Professor Richardson
Faculty
Program
P
hilosophy poses general questions about reality, knowledge, reasoning, language, and
conduct. The four main branches are metaphysics (What is the ultimate nature of
reality? What really exists and what is mere appearance?); epistemology (What, if
anything, can be known and how?); logic (What are the principles of correct reasoning?);
and ethics (What is moral value? And what moral values should we adopt?). Other, more
specific, branches of philosophy address questions concerning the nature of art, law, medicine, politics, religion, and the sciences.
Everyone tends to have or assume answers to these questions. The aim of the
department is to enable students to identify, clarify, and assess these answers, both ancient
and modern. Philosophy prepares students for a more reflective life, for advanced studies in
the subject, as well as for professions that emphasize analytic thinking and argumentation,
such as law, business, and programming.
Professor Emeritus:
Abelson
Richardson, Ruddick, Schiffer,
Unger
Visiting Professors:
Parfit, Wright
Professors:
Block, Boghossian, Dworkin, Field,
Fine, Foley, Kamm, Nagel, Peacocke,
Assistant Professors:
Belot, Dorr, White
Associated Faculty:
Mitsis, Murphy
MAJOR
Political Philosophy, V83.0102; or
Topics in Metaphysics and Epistemology, V83.0103; or Topics in
Language and Mind, V83.0104. No
credit toward the major is awarded
for a course with a grade lower than C.
Students considering a major in
philosophy are advised to skip over
the nonmajor introductory courses,
and to begin with one of the intensive introductory courses, or with one
of the following: History of Ancient
Philosophy, V83.0020; History of
Modern Philosophy, V83.0021;
Ethics, V83.0040; or Belief, Truth,
and Knowledge, V83.0076. Logic,
V83.0070, should be taken as soon as
possible.
JOINT MAJOR IN LANGUAGE
AND MIND
A major in philosophy requires nine
4-point courses in the department,
with numbers higher than V83.0009
(the courses listed as nonmajor introductory courses do not count). These
nine courses must include (1) Logic,
V83.0070; (2) History of Ancient
Philosophy, V83.0020; (3) History of
Modern Philosophy, V83.0021; (4)
Ethics, V83.0040; or Nature of Values, V83.0041; or Political Philosophy, V83.0045; (5) Belief, Truth,
and Knowledge, V83.0076; or Metaphysics, V83.0078; (6) Minds and
Machines, V83.0015; or Philosophy
of Mind, V83.0080; or Philosophy of
Language, V83.0085; and (7) Topics
in the History of Philosophy,
V83.0101; or Topics in Ethics and
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•
PHILOSOPHY
This major, intended as an introduction to cognitive science, is administered by the Departments of Linguistics, Philosophy, and Psychology.
Eleven courses are required (four in
linguistics, one in philosophy, five in
psychology, and one additional
course), to be constituted as follows.
The linguistics component consists
of Language, V61.0001, or Societies
and the Social Sciences: Linguistic
Perspectives, V55.0660; Grammatical Analysis, V61.0013; Language
and Mind, V61.0028; and one more
course chosen from Computational
Models of Sentence Construction,
V61.0024; Phonological Analysis,
V61.0012; and Introduction to
Semantics, V61.0004. The philosophy component consists of one
course, chosen from Minds and
Machines, V83.0015; Philosophy of
Language, V83.0085; and Logic,
V83.0070. The required psychology
component consists of four courses:
Introduction to Psychology,
V89.0001; either Statistical Reasoning for the Behavioral Sciences,
V89.0009, or Statistics for the
Behavioral Sciences, V89.0010; The
Psychology of Language, V89.0056;
and Cognition, V89.0029; in addition, one course, chosen from Seminar
in Thinking, V89.0026; Language
Acquisition and Cognitive Development, V89.0300; and Laboratory in
Human Cognition, V89.0028. The
eleventh course will be one of the
above-listed courses that has not
already been chosen to satisfy the
departmental components.
MINOR
Courses
Philosophy, V83.0021; one course
each must come from Group 2
(Ethics, Value, and Society) and
Group 3 (Metaphysics, Epistemology, Mind, Language, and Logic). No
credit toward the minor is awarded
for a course with a grade lower than C.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
A student may sign up for an independent study course if he or she
obtains the consent of a faculty
member who approves the study project and agrees to serve as adviser.
The student must also obtain the
approval of either the department
chair or the director of undergraduate studies. The student may take no
more than one such course in any
given semester and no more than
two such courses in total, unless
granted special permission by either
the department chair or the director
of undergraduate studies.
A minor in philosophy requires four
4-point courses in the department, at
least three with numbers higher than
V83.0009. One course must be
either History of Ancient Philosophy,
V83.0020, or History of Modern
HONORS PROGRAM
NONMAJOR INTRODUCTORY
COURSES
INTENSIVE INTRODUCTORY
COURSES
Introduction to Philosophy
V83.0001 4 points.
The most basic questions about
human life and its place in the universe. Topics may include free will,
the relation of body and mind, and
immortality; skepticism, self-knowledge, causality, and a priori knowledge; religious and secular ethical
codes and theories; and intuition,
rationality, and faith. Includes classic
and current philosophers (e.g., Plato,
Descartes, Hume, Russell, Sartre).
Central Problems in Philosophy
V83.0010 4 points.
An intensive introduction to central
problems in philosophy. Topics may
include free will, the existence of
God, skepticism and knowledge, and
the mind-body problem.
Ethics and Society
V83.0005 4 points.
Examines grounds for moral judgment and action in various social
contexts. Typical topics: public versus private good and duties; individualism and cooperation; inequalities
and justice; utilitarianism and rights;
regulation of sexual conduct, abortion, and family life; poverty and
wealth; racism and sexism; and war
and capital punishment.
Honors in philosophy will be awarded to majors who (1) have an overall
grade point average of 3.5 and an
average in philosophy courses of 3.5
and (2) successfully complete the
Minds and Machines
V83.0015 4 points.
An intensive introduction to the discipline of philosophy, by way of
study of conceptual issues in cognitive science, focusing on the conflict
between computational and biological approaches to the mind. Topics
covered include whether a machine
could think, the reduction of the
mind to the brain, connectionism
and neural nets, mental representation, and whether consciousness can
be explained materialistically.
Life and Death
V83.0017 4 points.
An intensive introduction to the dis-
honors program. This program,
which is taken for 2 points in each of
the student’s last two semesters, is
intended to provide an intensive and
rewarding culmination to the philosophy major. It involves participation
in an honors seminar and the writing
of a senior thesis under the supervision of a faculty adviser. Entry to the
honors program requires a 3.0 average overall and a 3.5 average in at
least five philosophy courses (at least
one in each of the three groups, plus
one topics course). The thesis must
be approved by the adviser and by a
second faculty reader for honors to be
awarded.
Majors interested in admission to
the program should consult the
director of undergraduate studies
toward the end of their junior year.
For general requirements, please
see under Honors and Awards.
COURSE PREREQUISITES
The department treats its course prerequisites seriously. Students not satisfying a course’s prerequisites are
strongly advised to seek the permission of the instructor beforehand.
cipline of philosophy, by way of
study of conceptual issues bearing on
life and death. Topics may include
the definition, worth, and meaning
of human life; justifications for creating, preserving, and taking human
and animal life; conceptions of, and
attitudes toward, death and immortality; abortion, euthanasia, and
quality of life.
GROUP 1: HISTORY OF
PHILOSOPHY
History of Ancient Philosophy
V83.0020 4 points.
Examination of the major figures and
movements in Greek philosophy,
especially Plato and Aristotle.
History of Modern Philosophy
V83.0021 4 points.
Examination of the major figures and
movements in philosophy in Europe
from the 17th to the early 19th century, including some of the works of
Descartes, Spinoza, Leibniz, Hobbes,
Locke, Berkeley, Hume, and Kant.
PHILOSOPHY
•
229
Philosophy in the Middle Ages
V83.0025 Identical to V65.0060.
Prerequisite: one course in philosophy,
preferably V83.0020. 4 points.
Study of major medieval philosophers, their issues, schools, and current philosophic interests. Includes,
among others, Augustine, Anselm,
Thomas Aquinas, Duns Scotus, and
William of Ockham.
Kant
V83.0030 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy, preferably V83.0021.
4 points.
Study of Kant’s metaphysics, epistemology, and ethics.
From Hegel to Nietzsche
V83.0032 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Study of principal philosophic works
by Hegel and Nietzsche, with some
attention to some of the following:
Fichte, Schelling, Kierkegaard,
Schopenhauer, and Marx.
American Philosophy
V83.0035 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Careful examination and assessment
of the pragmatic tradition and its
philosophical, sociological, and cultural impact. Readings from Peirce,
James, Dewey, C. I. Lewis, E. Nagel,
and Quine.
Existentialism and
Phenomenology
V83.0036 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Examines the characteristic method,
positions, and themes of the existentialist and phenomenological movements and traces their development
through study of such thinkers as
Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Husserl,
Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, and
Sartre.
20th-Century Analytic Philosophy
V83.0037 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Investigation of the primary works of
this century’s central analytic
philosophers, including Frege, Russell, the positivists, Wittgenstein,
and Quine.
Recent Continental Philosophy
V83.0039 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Surveys and evaluates the ideas of the
major figures in continental philosophy in the latter part of the 20th
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PHILOSOPHY
century. Authors include (late) Heidegger, Gadamer, Habermas, Foucault, and Derrida.
Topics in the History of
Philosophy
V83.0101 Prerequisites: two courses in
philosophy, at least one in history of philosophy. 4 points.
Careful study of a few topics in the
history of philosophy—either
one philosopher’s treatment of several
philosophical problems or several
philosophers’ treatments of one or
two closely related problems. Examples: selected topics in Aristotle, theories of causation in early modern
philosophy, and Kant’s reaction to
Hume.
GROUP 2: ETHICS, VALUE,
AND SOCIETY
Ethics
V83.0040 4 points.
Examines fundamental questions of
moral philosophy: What are our
most basic values and which of them
are specifically moral values? What
are the ethical principles, if any, by
which we should judge our actions,
ourselves, and our lives?
The Nature of Values
V83.0041 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Examines the nature and grounds of
judgments about moral and/or nonmoral values. Are such judgments
true or false? Can they be more or
less justified? Are the values of which
they speak objective or subjective?
Political Philosophy
V83.0045 4 points.
Examines fundamental issues concerning the justification of political
institutions. Topics may include
democratic theory, political obligation
and liberty, criteria of a just society,
human rights, and civil disobedience.
Medical Ethics
V83.0050 4 points.
Examines moral issues in medical
practice and research. Topics include
euthanasia and quality of life; deception, hope, and paternalism; malpractice and unpredictability; patient
rights, virtues, and vices; animal,
fetal, and clinical research; criteria for
rationing medical care; ethical principles, professional codes, and case
analysis (e.g., Quinlan, Willowbrook,
Baby Jane Doe).
Philosophy of Law
V83.0052 4 points.
Examines the nature of law, its relations to morality, and its limits. Topics: positivism and natural law theory, theories of criminal justice and
punishment; concepts of liberty,
responsibility, and rights. Considers
the views of such thinkers as Austin,
Bentham, Dworkin, Fuller, Hart,
Rawls, and others.
Philosophical Perspectives on
Feminism
V83.0055 4 points.
Evaluation of the morality and rationality of typical female and male
behavior and motivation and of the
social institutions relating the sexes.
Critical examination of proposals for
change. Topics include development
of gender- and non-gender-typed
personalities; heterosexuality and
alternatives; marriage, adultery, and
the family; concepts of sexism and
misogyny; and political and economic philosophies of sex equality and
inequality.
War and Morality
V83.0057 4 points.
Focuses on complex moral problems
concerning decisions to enter a state
of war and results of active engagement in warfare. Possible topics
include competing theories of aggression; “just war” theory; pacifism; the
rules of warfare; the “innocent” in the
context of war; acceptable versus
unacceptable weaponry; individual
versus collective responsibility; war in
the context of diplomacy (e.g., the
threat of war, the arms race, the logic
of deterrence); and terrorism.
Aesthetics
V83.0060 4 points.
Introduces problems raised by the
nature of art, artworks, and aesthetic
judgment. Topics include the expressive and representational properties
of artworks, aesthetic attention, and
appreciation; the creation, interpretation, and criticism of artworks.
Readings from classical and contemporary sources.
Philosophy and Literature
V83.0062 4 points.
Explores the relations between philosophy and literature by considering
both the presentation of philosophical ideas in literary forms and
philosophers’ accounts of the proper
status of literature. A central topic is
whether philosophy and literature
aim to produce basically different
types of understanding or different
effects on their audiences. Readings
include classic and contemporary
plays, novels, and essays by, for
example, Euripides, Plato, Dostoevsky, and Sartre.
Topics in Ethics and Political
Philosophy
V83.0102 Prerequisites: two courses in
philosophy, including either V83.0040,
V83.0041, V83.0045, or V83.0052.
4 points.
Thorough study of certain concepts
and issues in current theory and
debate. Examples: moral and political rights, virtues and vices, equality,
moral objectivity, the development
of moral character, the variety of ethical obligations, and ethics and public policy.
GROUP 3: METAPHYSICS,
EPISTEMOLOGY, MIND,
LANGUAGE, AND LOGIC
Logic
V83.0070 4 points.
An introduction to the basic techniques of sentential and predicate
logic. The students will learn how to
put arguments from ordinary language into symbols, how to construct derivations within a formal
system, and how to ascertain validity
using truth-tables or models.
Advanced Logic
V83.0072 Prerequisite: V83.0070.
4 points.
An introduction to the basic concepts, methods, and results of metalogic, i.e., the formal study of systems of reasoning.
Set Theory
V83.0073 Prerequisite: V83.0070.
4 points.
An introduction to the basic concepts and results of set theory.
Modal Logic
V83.0074 Prerequisite: V83.0070.
4 points.
Modal logic is the logic of necessity
and possibility and other such
notions. In recent times, the framework of possible worlds has provided
a valuable tool for investigating the
formal properties of these notions.
This course provides an introduction
to the basic concepts, methods, and
results of modal logic, with an
emphasis on its application to such
other fields as philosophy, linguistics, and computer science.
Belief, Truth, and Knowledge
V83.0076 4 points.
Considers questions such as the following: Can I have knowledge of
anything outside my own mind—for
example, physical objects or other
minds? Or is the skeptic’s attack on
my commonplace claims to know
unanswerable? What is knowledge,
and how does it differ from belief?
Metaphysics
V83.0078 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Discusses general questions concerning the nature of reality and truth.
What kind of things exist? Are there
minds or material bodies? Is change
illusory? Are human actions free or
causally determined? What is a person and what, if anything, makes
someone one and the same person?
Philosophy of Mind
V83.0080 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Examination of the relationship
between the mind and the brain, of
the nature of the mental, and of personal identity. Can consciousness be
reconciled with a scientific view of
the world?
Philosophy of Language
V83.0085 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy. 4 points.
Examines various philosophical and
psychological approaches to language
and meaning and their consequences
for traditional philosophical problems in metaphysics, epistemology,
and ethics. Discusses primarily 20thcentury authors, including Russell,
Wittgenstein, and Quine.
Philosophy of Science
V83.0090 Prerequisite: one course in
philosophy or natural sciences. 4 points.
Examination of philosophical issues
about the natural sciences. Central
questions include the following:
What is the nature of scientific
explanation? How does science differ
from pseudoscience? What is a scientific law? How do experiments work?
Philosophy of Biology
V83.0091 Prerequisite: one course in
biology. 4 points.
Examines the philosophical or conceptual issues that arise in and about
biology, including the proper role if
any of teleology in biology; the
analysis of biological functions; the
structure of the theory of evolution
by natural selection and the sense of
its key concepts, such as fitness and
adaptation; the unit of selection;
essentialism and the nature of
species.
Philosophy of the Social Sciences
V83.0092 Prerequisite: one course in
social sciences. 4 points.
Addresses questions raised by the
“social sciences.” What makes a field
a social science (anthropology, economics, sociology) rather than a
natural science (physics, chemistry,
biology)? Are the social sciences
inferior? Are they too subjective and
interpretive? Should they be reformed
to emulate the rigor and predictive
power of physics? Or can the social
sciences progress with distinct methods and forms of understanding?
Philosophy of Religion
V83.0096 4 points.
Analysis of central problems in the
philosophy of religion. Among the
topics discussed are the nature of
religion, the concept of God, the
grounds for belief in God, the
immortality of the soul, faith and
revelation, and problems of religious
language. Readings from both classic
and contemporary sources.
Philosophy of Mathematics
V83.0098 4 points.
Critical discussion of alternative
philosophical views as to what mathematics is, such as platonism,
empiricism, constructivism, intuitionism, formalism, logicism, and
various combinations thereof.
Topics in Metaphysics and
Epistemology
V83.0103 Prerequisite: two courses in
philosophy, including either V83.0076
or V83.0078. 4 points.
Careful study of a few current issues
in epistemology and metaphysics.
Examples: skepticism, necessity,
causality, personal identity, and possible worlds.
PHILOSOPHY
•
231
Topics in Language and Mind
V83.0104 Prerequisite: two courses in
philosophy, including either V83.0015,
V83.0080, or V83.0085. 4 points.
Careful study of a few current issues
in language and mind. Examples:
theory of reference, analyticity, intentionality, theory of mental content
and attitudes, emergence and supervenience of mental states.
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PHILOSOPHY
HONORS AND
INDEPENDENT STUDY
Honors Seminar
V83.0201-0202 Prerequisite: open to
seniors with permission of the department.
2 points per term.
Seminar for majors in philosophy
who have been approved by the
department on the basis of merit. See
description of “Honors Program,”
above.
Independent Study
V83.0301, 0302 Prerequisite: permission of the department. Available only for
study of subjects not covered in regularly
offered courses. 2 or 4 points per term.
See description of “Independent
Study,” above.
D E PA RT M E N T O F
Physics (85)
ANDRE AND BELLA MEYER HALL OF PHYSICS, 4 WASHINGTON PLACE, NEW YORK, NY 10003-6621. (212) 998-7700.
CHAIR OF THE
D E PA RTME NT:
Professor Mincer
DIRECTOR OF
U N D ER G R A D U AT E
STUDIES:
Professor Robinson
Faculty
Program
P
hysics at the College of Arts and Science is a multidimensional discipline. The
department offers several tracks of study designed for preprofessional students as well
as aspiring physicists. A detailed curriculum is worked out for each student, with
individual attention to progress and career plans.
The physics major may participate in internationally recognized research activities
carried out by the faculty. Some major areas of specialization include astrophysics, atomic
physics, condensed matter physics, and elementary particle physics.
In addition to technical physics courses, the department offers general interest
courses intended to broaden the scientific background of nonscience majors.
Professors Emeriti:
Bederson, Bornstein, Borowitz,
Shamos, Spruch, Williamson,
Yarmus
Professors:
Brandt, Brown, Budick, Farrar,
Glassgold, Hoffert, Huggins, Levy,
Lowenstein, Mincer, Nemethy,
Percus, Porrati, Richardson,
Robinson, Rosenberg, Schucking,
Sculli, Sirlin, Sokal, Stroke,
Zaslavsky, Zwanziger
Associate Professors:
Dvali, Gruzinov, Kent, Sleator
DEPARTMENTAL
OBJECTIVES
engineering major at Stevens. The
five-year program leads to a B.S.
degree in physics and a B.E. degree
in either civil engineering, electrical
engineering, or mechanical engineering. For further information, contact
Mr. Joseph Hemmes, coordinator of
the B.S./B.E. program, at the College
Advising Center, Silver Center, 100
Washington Square East, Room 905;
(212) 998-8130.
For students not majoring in
physics, the following courses are
suitable for single electives, have no
prerequisites, and assume no mathematical background beyond the high
school level. Of special interest to
the nonscience major are the following: Light and Color in Nature and
Art, V85.0009; Sound and Music,
V85.0010; 20th-Century Concepts
of Space, Time, and Matter,
V85.0020; The Universe: Its Nature
and History, V85.0007; and Origins
of Astronomy, V85.0008. Also of
interest is Observational Astronomy,
V85.0013, for which a prerequisite
is recommended.
Physics is the most highly developed of the natural sciences. For this
reason, it is frequently taken as the
exemplar of the scientific method,
the model for other quantitative sciences. Those trained in physics are
found in many occupations. A higher
degree opens the possibility of creative research in industry or teaching
and research in colleges and universities. Men and women with degrees
in physics often are employed in
various fields of engineering. Undergraduate training in physics is
valuable preparation for careers in
medicine and dentistry, computer
technology, environmental and earth
sciences, communications, and science
writing. It is fairly common for those
planning research careers in molecular biology, chemical physics, or
astronomy to major in physics while
The Department of Physics offers
several programs for majors in
physics, leading to either the Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor of Science
degree. A minor in physics and a
minor in astronomy are also offered.
The B.A. major is particularly well
suited for preprofessional and other
students who, while not planning
careers in physics, would like to have
the benefits and background of an
undergraduate major in physics. The
B.A. intensive major is for students
who plan to continue their study of
physics in graduate school or who
intend to work in physics or related
fields. The B.S. degree provides some
breadth in other sciences.
In a joint program between New
York University and Stevens Institute of Technology, a physics major
at NYU can be combined with an
Assistant Professors:
Hogg, Scoccimarro, Zaldarriaga,
Zhang
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undergraduates. Because of their
physical intuition, ability to develop
abstract models, and expertise in
quantitative reasoning, physicists are
frequently members of interdisciplinary groups engaged in studying
problems not directly related to
physics.
SUGGESTED PROGRAMS
FOR MAJORS IN PHYSICS
The calculus requirement may be
satisfied by taking Intensive Calculus
I, II, V63.0221, 0222, or Calculus I,
II, III, V63.0121, 0122, 0123. Students who take the Intensive Calculus sequence begin it in the fall
semester of their freshman year. Students who complete Intensive Calculus I, II are encouraged to take Linear
Algebra, V63.0024, in the fall term
of the second year. Variations of the
following programs may be constructed with the approval of the
director of undergraduate studies.
B.A. PROGRAMS
1. Major in physics: Provides maximum flexibility for tailoring a program to the needs of a student who
has a strong interest in another area
in addition to physics. Those wishing
to enter physics as a profession should
take the intensive major. The major
in physics consists of the following
courses: Year 1: V63.0121, V63.0122,
V85.0091, V85.0093, and V85.0094;
Year 2: V63.0123, V85.0095,
V85.0096, and V85.0106; Year 3:
V85.0103, V85.0104, V85.0131,
and V85.0132; Year 4: V85.0112;
and Year 3 or 4: two electives to be
chosen from the physics courses numbered V85.0110 and above.
2. Intensive major in physics:
Recommended for students planning
to do graduate work in physics or
related areas and for those who need
a broader base in physics for their
work in other fields. Year 1:
V63.0221, V63.0222, V85.0091,
V85.0093, and V85.0094; Year 2:
V85.0095, V85.0096, and
V85.0106; Year 3: V85.0103,
Courses
The following courses are lectures
unless otherwise indicated.
Physics and Sports
V85.0006 4 points.
Application of physical principles to
the understanding of various sports.
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PHYSICS
V85.0104, V85.0110, V85.0120,
V85.0131, and V85.0132; Year 4:
V85.0123, V85.0140, and
V85.0112.
Math electives: Students are
advised to take advanced-level mathematics courses. Consult with the
director of undergraduate studies.
3. Double major including
physics: Offers the flexibility to
complete the requirements for a second major in the College. Students
may wish to combine a major in
physics with a major in a field such
as mathematics, computer science,
chemistry, economics, or biology.
Students should consult the director
of undergraduate studies in their
freshman year to outline a program
that is best tailored to their needs.
B.S. PROGRAM
1. Bachelor of Science in
physics: The B.S. degree involves
breadth in the sciences in addition to
the physics major. The B.S. degree in
physics will be granted to students
completing the following, in addition to the standard college requirements.
a. All courses required for the
B.A. major, including electives.
b. A semester of computer science at or above the level of Introduction to Computer Science I,
V22.0101.
c. Two semesters of chemistry at
or above the level of College Chemistry I, II, V25.0101, 0102.
d. An elective course in biology—
at or above the level of Principles of
Biology, V23.0011; or in chemistry—above the level of College
Chemistry II, V25.0102.
2. Joint program with Stevens
Institute of Technology: The
department offers a five-year program leading to a B.S. (in physics)
and a B.E. (in one of several engineering disciplines) in conjunction
with Stevens Institute of Technology.
Detailed programs of study are
worked out in consultation with Mr.
Joseph Hemmes, coordinator of the
program, in the College of Arts and
Uses basic physics to explain specific
athletic techniques and conversely
illustrates many aspects of elementary physics through examples of
popular sports. Applies the physical
laws of mechanics and fluid dynamics to methods and strategies used in
Science Advising Center, Silver
Center, 100 Washington Square East,
Room 905; (212) 998-8130.
MINORS
1. Minor in physics: Provides the
student with a general survey of the
field plus specialized study. Consists
of four of the following courses, or
three of the following courses plus
one of the courses listed under the
minor in astronomy: V85.0006,
V85.0009, V85.0010, V85.0011
and 0012, V85.0019, V85.0020, and
all courses numbered above and
including V85.0091 except for
V85.0092, V85.0094, and
V85.0096.
2. Minor in astronomy: Provides a comprehensive introduction
to astronomy, including modern concepts, historical ideas, and observational experience. Consists of four
courses: V85.0007 and the three following (or two of the following, and
one of the courses listed under the
minor in physics): V85.0008,
V85.0013, and V85.0150.
INDEPENDENT STUDY
V85.0997, 0998 may be taken by all
students who have interests that are
not included in the curriculum or
who wish to carry out research under
faculty supervision.
HONORS PROGRAM
Candidates for a degree with honors
in physics must complete the
requirements for an intensive major
described above. They must also
complete the equivalent of a semester
of experimental or theoretical
research. Students who wish to fulfill
this requirement should discuss possible options, such as independent
study courses, with the director of
undergraduate studies. A research
paper based on this work must be
prepared and orally presented. For
additional general requirements for a
degree with honors, please see Honors
and Awards.
performing a variety of athletic activities. Examples: the use of linear and
angular momentum conservation to
explain various karate motions and
countermotions, the use of gas laws
in scuba diving, and the aerodynamics of golf balls.
The Universe: Its Nature and
History
V85.0007 4 points.
Qualitative introduction to our
understanding of the nature and evolution of the universe. Topics include
the creation of the cosmos; its explosive evolution, present structure, and
ultimate fate; the nature of stars and
galaxies; the structure and evolution
of our Milky Way; the birth, life,
and eventual death of the solar system; our place and role in the universe; and the relationship of modern
astronomical ideas to other cultural
disciplines.
Origins of Astronomy
V85.0008 4 points.
Introduction to the historical development of astronomy, from earliest
times through the Copernican revolution. Traces the changes in our perception of the heavens and the influences that led to those changes, from
astrology to the discoveries of
Galileo and the physics of Newton.
Includes descriptive astronomy of the
solar system and a trip to the Hayden Planetarium.
Light and Color in Nature
and Art
V85.0009 Assumes high school-level
mathematics background. Not open to
students who have completed V55.0205.
4 points.
Physical basis for optical phenomena
involved in many facets of daily life.
Topics include the interaction of
light with materials and the visual
perceptions it produces; the basic
physics of spectra; wave, ray, and
quantum optics; polarized light; photography; the laser and holography;
paintings; rainbows and mirages;
color theory and systems; formation
of images; and optical instruments.
Sound and Music
V85.0010 Assumes high school-level
mathematics background. 4 points.
Explores the production of musical
sound and how it is perceived by us,
dealing mainly with the physical
basis of sound. Covers sound waves;
resonance; how musical instruments
produce sound; the concepts of scales
and harmony; physical acoustics;
physiological factors of perception;
acoustics of auditoria; and sound
recording and reproduction. Develops the necessary physics for the
course, as needed.
General Physics I
V85.0011 Prerequisite: V63.0121 or
permission of the instructor. With
V85.0012 forms a two-semester sequence
that must be taken in order. Lecture and
laboratory-recitation. Not open to students who have completed V85.0091
with a grade of C- or better. 5 points.
Begins a two-semester introduction
to physics intended primarily for
preprofessional students and for
those majoring in a science other
than physics, although well prepared
students may wish to take the
physics majors sequence V85.0091,
V85.0093, V85.0094, V85.0095,
and V85.0096 instead. Topics
include kinematics and dynamics of
particles; momentum, work, and
energy; gravitation; circular,
angular, and harmonic motion;
mechanical and thermal properties of
solids, liquids, and gases; heat and
thermodynamics.
General Physics II
V85.0012 Prerequisite: V85.0011
with a grade of C- or better, or permission of the department. Lecture and laboratory-recitation. 5 points.
Continuation of V85.0011. Topics
include electric charge, field, and
potential; magnetic forces and fields;
resistive, capacitive, and inductive
circuits; electromagnetic induction;
wave motion; electromagnetic waves;
geometrical optics; interference, diffraction, and polarization of light;
relativity; atomic and nuclear structure; elementary particle physics.
Observational Astronomy
V85.0013 Recommended prerequisite:
V85.0007 or V85.0008. Lecture and
observing session. 4 points.
To see the moons of Jupiter through
a telescope, to observe the mountains
and craters of the Moon, or to
glimpse a distant star cluster is more
exciting than to read a description in
a book. This course provides an
introduction to the theory and practice of observational astronomy. Topics include the phenomena that can
be seen in the night sky, coordinate
systems, optics, and how to use a
telescope. Observing sessions are carried out using eight-inch telescopes.
20th-Century Concepts of Space,
Time, and Matter
V85.0020 Assumes high school-level
geometry and intermediate algebra background. Not open to students who have
completed V55.0204. 4 points.
The 20th century has been witness
to two major revolutions in man’s
concepts of space, time, and matter.
Einstein’s special and general theories of relativity: implications of the
special theory for our understanding
of the unity of space and time and
the general theory, for our understanding of the nature of gravity.
Quantum mechanics: a new picture
of the basic structure and interactions of atoms, molecules, and
nuclei. Topics include the uncertainty principle, wave-particle duality,
and the continuing search for the
fundamental constituents of matter.
Physics I
V85.0091 Corequisite: V63.0122 or
V63.0222. With V85.0093 and
V85.0095 forms a three-semester
sequence that must be taken in order,
starting in the fall semester. Lecture and
recitation. 3 points.
Begins a three-semester introduction
to physics intended for physics
majors and other interested science
and mathematics majors. Topics
include kinematics and dynamics of
particles; energy and momentum;
rotational kinematics and dynamics;
harmonic oscillators; gravitational
fields and potentials.
Physics II
V85.0093 Prerequisite: V85.0091
with a grade of C- or better, or permission of the department. Corequisite:
V63.0123, except for students who have
completed V63.0222. Physics majors
must also register for V85.0094. Lecture
and recitation. 3 points.
Continuation of V85.0091. Topics
include electrostatics; dielectics; currents and circuits; the magnetic field
and magnetic materials; induction;
AC circuits; Maxwell’s equations.
Physics II Laboratory
V85.0094 Corequisite: V85.0093
Laboratory. 2 points.
Experiments will be based on subjects covered in V85.0091 and
V85.0093.
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Physics III
V85.0095 Prerequisite: V85.0093
with a grade of C- or better, or permission
of the department. Physics majors must
also register for V85.0096. Lecture and
recitation. 3 points.
Continuation of V85.0093. Topics
include wave motion; sound; the
reflection, refraction, interference,
and diffraction of light; polarization;
thermodynamics; kinetic theory and
statistical physics.
Physics III Laboratory
V85.0096 Prerequisite: V85.0094
with a grade of C- or better, or permission
of the department. Corequisite:
V85.0095. Laboratory. 2 points.
Continuation of V85.0094. Experiments are based on subjects covered
in V85.0093 and V85.0095.
Modern Physics I, II
V85.0103, 0104 Prerequisites:
V85.0095 or V85.0012 and
V63.0123 or V63.0222. Lecture and
laboratory. 5 points per term.
Introduction to modern physics for
students who have had at least one
year of college physics and three
semesters of calculus or intensive calculus. Topics include special relativity, introductory quantum mechanics,
hydrogen atom, atomic and molecular structure, nuclear physics, elementary particle physics, solid-state
physics, and chemical physics. Provides applications to current technology and scientific research.
Mathematical Physics
V85.0106 Prerequisites: V85.0093
and either V63.0123 or V63.0222.
Lecture and recitation. 3 points.
Mathematical preparation for the
junior and senior courses in physics.
Vector analysis, Fourier series and
integrals, ordinary differential
equations, matrices, partial differential equations, and boundary-value
problems.
Electronics for Scientists
V85.0110 Identical to V23.0110 and
V25.0671. Prerequisite: V85.0012 or
V85.0093, or permission of the instructor. Lecture and laboratory. 5 points.
Introduction to basic analog and digital electronics used in modern
experiment and computers for students of all science disciplines, mainly
in a laboratory setting. Basic concepts and devices presented in lecture
are studied in the laboratory. The
course covers filters, power supplies,
transistors, operational amplifiers,
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PHYSICS
digital logic gates, and both combinatorial and sequential digital circuits. Students learn the functions of
modern electronic instrumentation
and measurement.
Experimental Physics
V85.0112 Prerequisite: V85.0096
and V85.0103. Laboratory. 3 points.
Introduces the experiments and techniques of modern physics. Following
a number of introductory experiments, students have at their option
a variety of open-ended experiments
they can pursue, including the use of
microcomputers for data analysis.
Experimental areas include optics
(holography), atomic beams, Mossbauer effect, radiation physics, and
magnetic resonance.
Dynamics
V85.0120 Prerequisites: V85.0095
and V85.0106. 3 points.
Intermediate-level course on the
principles and applications of
dynamics. Emphasis on the formulation of problems and their numerical
solution. Topics include conservation
laws, central force motion, Lagrange’s
and Hamilton’s equations, normal
modes and small oscillations, and
accelerated reference frames.
Quantum Mechanics I, II
V85.0123, 0124 Prerequisites:
V85.0104, V85.0120, and
V85.0132. 3 points per term.
Designed to deepen the insights into
quantum mechanics introduced in
V85.0103, 0104 and to provide an
introduction to the more formal
mathematical structure of quantum
mechanics. The Schroedinger and
Heisenberg description of quantal
systems; perturbation theory; spin
and statistics; coupling of angular
momenta; scattering theory; and
applications to atomic, molecular,
nuclear, and elementary particle
physics.
Electricity and Magnetism I, II
V85.0131, 0132 Prerequisi